Full text of "Works"
l4l* * X* * *J< * til
c
i
n r)
1/
y^^^^^^^
THE WORKS
BISHOP COSIN.
a
THE
W 0 R K S
OF Tiir
11 1 G 11 T REVEREND FATHER IN GOD
JOHN CO SIN
LORD BISHOP OF DURHAM.
iV 0 ir FIRST COLLECTED
VOLUME THE FIRST.
SERMONS.
OXFORD :
JOHN HENRY PARKER.
MDCCCXI.lTl.
OXFORD :
PBINTET) BY I. SHRIMPTON.
PREFACE.
Bishop Cosin, tlie faithful and trusted adherent of King
Charles the Martyr, the friend of Montague and Laud, the
first who was deprived of his dignities in the University of
Cambridge, and sequestered from his ecclesiastical benefices
by the puritan faction, was no less distinguished by his un-
rivalled Annotations upon the Book of Common Prayer, than
by his general powers as a controversialist. The Avritings of
this eminent and illustrious person will be always, therefore,
interesting, both to those who value his piety, judgment, and
learning, as well as those who study his life and character.
Some surprise has been consequently excited that his works
have not been published^ in a collected form. The present
is the first attempt made to supply this deficiency.
The editor, although he has laboured under many difiicul-
ties in collecting the scattered works of Bishop Cosin, has
still enjoyed many and important advantages. He begs
leave in the first place to ofi'er his thanks to the Warden
and Senate of the University of Durham for their kindness
a In 1692, about twenty years after interrupted the execution of this pro-
the death of Bishop Cosin, Dr. Thomas jeet, and it was ultimately abandoned.
Smith, anxious, as he informs us, that The manuscripts collected by Smith
the theological writings of such an emi- for this purpose (which are neither
nent Divine should not be permitted to numerous nor very important), are
remain in obscurity, contemplated the deposited in the Bodleian Library, and
publication of such of them as were have been employed in the formation
then unprinted. Adverse circumstances of the present edition.
VI PREFACE.
in permitting liim to make use of transcripts of some of the
unprintcd remains of Bishop Cosin, which are to be found in
their Library. To the Venerable Charles Thorp^ D.D.^, Arch-
deacon of Durham, and the Venerable W. F. Raymond, M. A.,
Archdeacon of Northumberland, the official Trustees of the
Library bequeathed by Bishop Cosin to the clergy of the
diocese of Durham, he is indebted for the opportunity of
examining at his leisure the Bishop^s Correspondence, his
Notes on the Common Prayer, and various other manuscripts.
His warmest gratitude is due to the Dean and Chapter of
Durham, for their kindness in affording him the pri^■ilege of
inspecting the Registers and other private documents belong-
ing to that Cathedral Church, with w^hicli Cosin was inti-
mately connected, first as Prebendary and afterwards as
Bishop, for nearly half a centmy. And by the Hberality of
the same body, he is now enabled to lay before the public the
Sermons'^ which are contained in the present volume.
These Sermons embrace a period of time extending from
1621 to 1659, the first ha^dng been preached shortly after
his admission into Holy Orders, and the last not long before
his return from his seventeen years' exile. Although allusion
is made to several others '^, these are the only Sermons which
are preserved. Having been preached for the most part
upon the festivals of the Church, they are intended to illus-
trate the events which the services of the day commemorate'^.
They advocate with much skill and learning, and with no
inconsiderable powers of eloquence, the trutlis of the Gospel
as exhibited in the doctrines of the Church of England;
opposing the erroneous extremes of modern Romanism
'" The original Sermons are bound 247; and the present volume, p. 131,
u]) into one small volume and are 218.
marked A. iv. 31. It does not appear '' See p. 1, 41, 206, 323, &c. Finita
how they came into the possession of concione, quae partem aliquam vel
Dr. George Smith, Prebendary of Dur- Evangelii vel Epistohe, vel alterius
ham, by whom they were presented to loci S. Scripturse et cxplicare et appli-
the Library of the Dean and Chapter. care solet . . . Cosin. de Eccl. Anglicanae
' See Evelyn's Memoirs, i. 241, religione &c., cap. xvi.
PREFACE. All
on the one liandj and of Dissent on the other. The uide
extent of their author's reading ^ in almost every department
of literature enabled him to illustrate his subject from a
variety of sources ; but it is obvious that the exegetical and
dogmatical teaching of the Primitive Church formed his
chief study ^ Traces of his acquaintance with the Avritings of
Hooker Sj and yet more frequently with those of Andrewes'',
are perceptible. It is no less difficiilt to imagine how the
individual by whom they were preached should have been
' looked upon as popishly affected/ than to reconcile some
opinions and practices attributed to him, with the general
tendency of their doctrines.
The editor originally intended to have prefixed a Life of
Bishop Cosin, but circumstances occurred which induced him
to reserve for another part of the work the various notices
which he had collected ; and instead of an original memoir,
to substitute that which had appeared in the ' Biographia
Britannica. This narrative, although not without its faults
and its omissions, gives a tolerably accurate account of the
events of the Bishop's life. It is compiled '^ chiefly from the
following som'ces.
" The dead man's real speech, a funeral sermon preached
^ It would appear that the Bishop volume (Pref. p. xxxvi.) ; but later ex-
frequently quoted from memory, and amples are probably uncommon,
sometimes fell into errors by so doing. ^ See p. 101, 103.
Thus, for example, he cites as from '' Besides the instances pointed out
the Psalms a text which is taken from at p. 103, 104, 124, &c., compare p. 60.
the Canticles, (p. 327,) and ascribes with Andr. Serm. v. 498 ; p. 76 with
(p. 145.) to Euripides a passage from Andr. v. 522 ; p. 202 with Andr. iii.
Menander, (Meineke, Fragm. Comic. 64; p. 257 with Andr. iii. 65 ; p. 117
GrEec. iv. 76. ed. BeroJ. 1841.) with Andr. iii. 130, &c. The connexion
f One peculiarity in their structure between Andrewes and Cosin is men-
seems worthy of notice. The preacher tioned in the Life in this volume, p. xiii.
commences with some observations for ' Edit. 1750. p. 1474. The edition
the purpose of connecting the subject- of the dissenter Kippis should be used
matter of the sermon with the peculiar with caution, as he did not scruple, when
services of the day ; he then introduces it suited his purpose, to mutilate the text
the Bidding- Prayer, and the te.xt then which he professed to reprint,
follows. Instances of this arrangement ^ The fragment of Cosin's auto-
are to be found in tlie sermons of biography, which is preserved among
Bishop Andrewes (Serm. ii. 39, 101; the Tanner jVISS., and printed by Gutch
iii. 131, 203.) and a few other divines in his Collectanea Curiosa, ii. 19, was
(Heylyn's Tracts, p. 153), as Basire, in unknown to the writer of the memoir
the Funeral Sennon reprinted in this here reprinted.
b2
VIU PREFACE.
on Ileb. xi. 4, upon the 29th of April, 1072', together with
a brief of the life, dif^nities, benefactions, principal actions
and sufferings, and of the death of the said late Lord Bishop
of Durham ; published (upon earnest request) by Isaac
Basire, D.D., chaplain in ordinary to his Majesty, and Arch-
deacon of Northumberland." 8vo. Lond. 1673.
Basire had ample opportunities of knowing the truth of
what he has here recorded. In 1632 he accompanied Morton,
whose chaplain he then was, into the diocese of Durham"™ ;
and the intercourse with Cosin which then commenced, was
continued from that period almost without interruption. In
1636 he was presented by Morton to the rectory of Egglesclif";
on December 12, 1643, he was collated to the seventh stall
in the Cathedral Church of Dm'ham°; and in 1644 he was
appointed archdeacon of NorthumberlandP. In the rebellion
which followed, he was driven from his preferments and com-
pelled to reside abroad, exposed, like Cosin, to many priva-
tions, and, like him, steadfast to the faith of his fathers,
When Cosin became bishop of Durham, Basire returned to
his archdeaconry, in fulfilling the duties of which he was
necessarily brought into close and frequent intercourse
with his diocesan. These circumstances carryins; his recol-
lections back over a space of forty years, stamp much value
upon his memoir ; but unfortunately, from its discursive style
it contains less information than might reasonably have been
anticipated.
'Vita reverendissimi et eruditissimi wi Joannis Cosin,
episcopi Dunelmensis, scriptore Thoma Smitho, S. Theologire
Doctore et Ecclesise Anglicanaj presbytero/ inserted in
Smith's ' Mtai quorumdam eruditissimorum virorum,' 4to.
Lond. 1707.
' Sec the present volume, p. xxxix. " Dean Balanquall's Register, i.
"' See 'Life and Correspondence of 174, b.
Dr. Basire, by the Rev. Dr. Darnell," p Darnell, p. 43; Le Neve's Fasti,
8vo. Lond. 1831, p. 1-. p. 355.
" Darnell, p. 2:3.
PREFACE. IK
Smith informs us^i that althougli his memoir is fomulcd
upon that of Basire, yet he had collected much information
from persons'' who had been acquainted with the Bishop when
in Paris, London, and Durham. And as Smith was in com-
munication with his namesake Dr. John Smith and Sir George
Wheeler, both prebendaries* of Durham, from whom he
obtained some of the Bishop's manuscripts, it may reasonably
be inferred that they would furnish whatever local informa-
tion they could collect respecting the object of their corre-
spondent's enquiries. The Life supplies details which are not
mentioned by Basire, but it is written in a style which makes
it even less inviting than his biographical sketch above
mentioned.
With the exception of the instances pointed out in the
note', the editor is responsible for the marginal references
and the annotations which accompany this volume.
1 Prtef., p. vi. was appointed prebendary by Cosin ;
' One of these was Evelyn : see his Hutcliinson's Hist, of Durham, ii. 222.
Memoirs, i. 2Jl, &c. ed. 1818, and edit. 1823.
Smith, p. 5. note. ' P. 87, note.
* Prsf. p. vii, viii. Dr. Jolm Smith
THE LIFE
OF
THE RIGHT REVEREND FATHER IN GOD
JOHN COSIN,
LORD BISHOP OF DURHAM.
LIFE OF COSIN.
CosiN (John) a learned bishop of Durliam in the seven-
teenth century, was the eldest sou of Giles Cosin, a citizen of
Norwich % by Elizabeth his wife, daughter of — Remington,
of Remington castle, a good and ancient family^. He was
born at Norwich, November 30, 1594, and educated in the free [1595.]
school there, till he came to be fourteen years of age. Then he
was transplanted into Caius College in Cambridge in 1610, of
which he was successively chosen scholar and fellow : and where
he regularly took his degrees in arts*^. Having distinguished
himself by his learning, diligence, and ingenuity, in the year
1616, when he was about twenty years of age, he had an
oflFer, at the same time, both from Dr. Lancelot Andrewes,
then bishop of Ely, and from Dr. Overall, bishop of Lichfield
and Coventry, of a librarian's place. But by his late tutor's
advice, he accepted of the latter's invitation ; who liked him
so well, that, on account of his knowledge and fair writing
he made him also his secretary*^. At the same time he
encouraged him to study divinity, and sent him from time
to time to keep his exercises in the University^. But, in
1619, he lost his excellent patron, and with him all hopes
and prospect of advancement^. However, providence soon
raised him a better patron in Dr. Richard Neile, then bishop
of Durliam, who took him for his domestic chaplain, and in
1624 conferred upon him the tenth prebend in the cathedi'al
chui'ch of Diu'ham [A], in which he was installed the 4th
* But originally of Foxhearth. He Loiul. 1707. 4to. p. 1.
was a very rich man, and a person of "^ Dr. Smith ib., and Dr. Basire, p.
great probity. 36, 43.
" See 'The dead man's real speech,' ^ Smith, p. 1, 2.
a funeral sermon on bishop Cosin, &c., •= Basire, ubi supra,
by Isaac Basire, 8vo. Lond. 1673. p. f Bishop Overall died May 7, [12,]
38 ; and ' Vita Joannis Cosini episcopi 161!),having the year before beentrans-
Dunelmensis. ScriptoreThomaSmitho.' latcd to Norwich.
XIV LIFE OF COSIX.
of December that same ycar^. In September following, lie
was collated to the archdeaconry of the East Hiding in the
church of York, vacant by the resignation of ^Nlarmaduke
Blakeston, whose daughter he had married •\ And on the
20th of July 1626, was moreover collated by his patron.
Bishop Neile, to the rich rectory of Branspcth [B] , in the
diocese of Durham^. The same year, he took the degree of
Bachelor in Divinity"^. About that time, having frequent
meetings at the bishop of Durham's house in London, with
Dr. William Laud, then bishop of Bath and Wells, Dr. Francis
Wliite, soon after bishop of Carlisle, Dr. Richard Montague,
and other learned men, distinguished by their zeal for the
doctrine and discipline of the Chui'ch of England, he began
to be obnoxious to the then Puritans, who (so great was their
malice or ignorance) looked upon all such divines as popishly
affected'. This imputation of theirs on Mr. Cosin in parti-
cular, was sufficiently authorized, as they imagined, by his
' Collection of Private Devotions,' [C] published in 1G27,
wherein many things were thought too much favourable to
popery. But how wrong this imputation was, let his whole
conduct testify. In 1628 he was concerned, with other
members of the Church of Durham, in a prosecution against
Peter Smart, prebendary there, for a seditious sermon
preached in that cathedral [D] . About the same time he
[1635.] took his degree of Doctor in Divinity ; and in 1634,
February the 8th, was elected Master of Peter-House, in
the room of Dr. Matthew Wren, newly made bishop of
Hereford. In that station he strenuously applied himself
to promote sound religion and useful learning "\ He served
the ofl&ce of Vice-Chancellor for the University of Cambridge
[1639.] in 1640. And the same year King Charles the First, to
whom he was chaplain, conferred upon him the deanery of
Peterborough, in which he was installed November 7, 1640".
But this dignity he did not long enjoy, or rather he did
not quietly enjoy it at all, since his troubles began three days
B Smith and B.asire, ubi supra. See '' Smith, p. 4.
also Survey of the Cathedrals of York, ' Ibid.
Durham, &c., by Br. Willis, Esq., 4to. '" Ibid., p. 8, f), 10.
Lond. 1727. vol. i. p. 273. " Ibid., p. 9, 11, and J. Ic Neve's
» Willis, ibid., p. 100. Fasti, edit. 171(). p. 241.
' Smith and Hasirc, as above.
LIFE OF COSIN. XV
after. For on the lOtli of November, a petition from Peter
Smart, against him, was read in the House of Commons ;
wherein Smart complained of the Doctor's superstition and
innovations in the church of Durham, and of his severe pro-
secutiou in the Iligh-Commission Court °. Wlicreupon, on
the 21st of the same month. Dr. Cosin was ordered to be sent
for by the serjeant-at-arms, and a committee appointed to
prepare a charge against him p. Soon after, he presented a
petition to the House, which, on the 28th following, was read,
and referred to a committee*i. On the 3rd of December, the
Serjeant had leave given him by the Commons, to take bail
for Dr. Cosin; which was accordingly done, the 19th of
January, 1640-41 ; the Doctor himself being bound in two
thousand pounds, and his secmnties in a thousand pounds
apiece, for his appearance upon summons \ Three days
after, namely, January the 22nd, he was by a vote of the
whole House, sequestered from his ecclesiastical benefices,
being the first clergj-man that was then used in that
manner^ On the loth of ]March ensuing, the Commons
sent up one-and-twenty articles of impeachment against
him [E] to the House of Lords* ; to which the Doctor put
in his answer upon oath; and so fully ^dndicated himself"
dimng the five days the affair was depending before the
Lords, that most of them acknowledged his innocence ; and
Mr. Glover, one of Smart's own counsel, told him openly at
the bar of the House of Lords, ' that he was ashamed of him,
and could not in conscience plead for him any longer.'
Whereupon the Lords dismissed the Doctor, upon his
putting in bail for his appearance; but they never sent for
him again ^■.
About the same time, upon a motion being made in the
House of Commons, ' that he had enticed a young scholar to
" Rushworth's Historical Collect, Loud. 1714. P. ii. p. 58.
P. iii. vol. i. edit. 1721. p. 41, 53; ' Rushworth, ubi supra, p. 188 ;
and Dr. Nalson, &c., edit. 1C82. vol. and Nalson, vol. i. p. 789, 790.
i. p. 518. " Both by his own self, and by tlie
P Nalson, ibid., p. 538. very witness that Smart and his son-
' Ibid., p. 569. in-law produced against him. Examen
' Ibid., p. 651. Historicum, p. 286.
' Attempt towards recovering an '^ Walker, ubi supra, p. 59 ; and
Account of the numbers and Fufterings Smith, p. 10, 11 ; and Heylyn's P>x-
of the Clergy, &c., by J. Walker, fol. amen Historicum, p. 286.
XVI LIFE OF COSIN.
popery/ he Avas committed to the serjeant-at-arms, to
attend daily till the House should call him to a heariuj^.
After fifty days' imprisonment, and charges of twenty shil-
lings a-day, he came at length to a hearing ; when he made
it ajjpear, that being Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge, he had
most severely punished that young scholar, (whom, wyiow
examination he had found guilty), by making him recant,
and expelling him the University. And to this some of
the members bore witness. However, the Doctor had no
manner of reparation made him for his great trouble and
expenses ; which gives but a disadvantageoiis idea of the
justice and honesty of that House*''.
In 1642 he was concerned, with others, in sending the
plate of Cambridge University to King Charles the First,
then at York ; for which a furious storm fell upon several
members of that University, and particularly upon Dr. Cosin;
who having some time before'' been voted unworthy to be a
Head or Governor in either of the Universities, or to hold
or enjoy any ecclesiastical promotion, was ejected fi'om his
Mastership by a warrant from the Earl of Manchester, dated
March 13th, 1642-3. So that, as he was the first that was
sequestered, so was he also the very first of his University,
who was turned out v.
Thus being deprived of all his preferments, and still fear-
ing the worst that might follow, he thought fit to leave
the kingdom, and to withdraw to Paris, in the year 1643.
Being safely arrived to that place, he did, according to King
Charles's order and direction, take under his care, and
officiate as chaplain to, such of Queen Henrietta Maria's
household as were protestants. With them, and other
English exiles that were daily resorting to Paris, he formed
a congregation, that assembled at first in a private house and
afterwards in the chapel of Sir Richard Brown, ambassador
from the court of England to that of Erance. Not long
after, he had lodgings assigned him in the Louvre, with a
small pension, on account of the relation he bore to Queen
Henrietta ^.
" Persccutio uiidecima, j). 23 ; Nal- above, p. 734.
son, as aliovf, p. 568. y Walker, ubi supra, p. 1j2.
" .lamiary 22, l(j 10-11 ; Nalson, as '■ Sniltli, p. 12, l.i, li.
LIFE OF COSIN. X\ U
During his residence in tliis place, lie shewed how false
and g:ronndless was the iini)utation that had been thrown
upon him 'of his being popishly aflected ;' for notwithstand-
ing his great straits, he remained steady and unmoved in
the profession of the protestant religion. lie kept up the
English Church-discipline, and the form of worship appointed
by the Common Prayer ; he reclaimed some that were quite
gone over to popery, and confirmed several more in the
protestant profession, who, by their converse with RoTiianists,
were become wavering, and inclinable to entertain favourable
opinions of the popish tenets". He also had several con-
troversies and disputes Avitli divers Jesuits and Romish
priests ; particularly once with the Prior of the English
Benedictines at Paris [F], in which he acquitted himself
Avith so much learning and sound reasoning, that he utterly
defeated the suspicions of his enemies, and much exceeded
the very expectations of his friends ^. There were made him
very great offers of preferment [G] , if he would have been
tempted thereby to alter his religion ; but he stood proof
against them all ^. He composed, during his exile, several
learned works, chiefly against the Roman Catholics ; of
which w^e shall give an account below.
Though he was extremely zealous for the doctrine and
discipline of the Church of England, yet he kept a friendly
intercourse and correspondence with the protestant ministers
at Charenton [H] ; who, on their parts, expressed the ut-
most regard for him, and permitted him sometimes to offici-
ate in their congregations [I] according to the rites pre-
scribed by the Book of Common Prayer '^.
Thus having, during his seventeen years exile in France,
behaved ' discreetly and prudently,' even in the judgment of
his enemies '', he returned to his native country at the Restor-
ation of King Charles the Second, and took possession again
of his preferments and dignities. About the end of July
1660, he came to his deanery at Peterborough, and was the
" See Exanien Histcricum, ut supra, <^ See D. Neal's History of the Piiri-
p. 293. tans, vol. ii. edit. 1733. p. 388. Mr.
'• Fuller, CI). Hist, B. xi. p. 173. Neal. adds that the Doctor was 'softened
'■ Walker, ubi supra, p. 60. in his principles by age and suffer-
•^ Smith, ubi supra, p, 19, 20; Ex- iugs.'
ainea Historicuni, p. 291, 292.
XVUl LIFE OF COSIN.
first that read the Common Prayer, in that cathedral, after
tlie late times of confusion f. But here he was not suffered
to rest ; for the king designed, a very little while after, to
make him dean of Durham, but reflecting on his sufferings
and upon his constant attendance and services beyond the
seas, he nominated him bishop of that rich scc^. Accord-
ingly, he was consecrated on the 2nd of December, IGGO,
in Westminster Abbey''. As soon as he could go down
into his diocese, he set about reforming many abuses that
had crept in there during the late anarchy; and by his
generous and hospitable temper, accompanied with a kind
and courteous deportment, he gained an universal respect
and esteem \ But he chiefly distinguished himself by his
very great munificence and charity, and by a pubHc spirit.
For, considering himself principally as steward of the large
revenues belonging to his see, he laid out a great share of
them in repairing or rebuilding the several edifices belonging
to the bishopric of Durham, Avhich had either been demolished
or neglected during the civil wars. For instance, he repaired
the castle at Bishop's Auckland, [K] and that at Durham,
Avhich he enlarged with some additional buildings, and re-
paired the bishop's house at Darlington, then very ruinous.
He also enriched his new chapel at Auckland, and that in the
castle of Durham, with several pieces of gilt plate, books,
and other costly ornaments, to remain to his successors in
the bishopric for ever ; the charge of all which buildings,
repairs, ornaments, &c. amounted to no less than twenty-six
thousand pounds ''. He likewise built and endowed two
hospitals; the one at Durham for eight poor people, the
other at Auckland for four ; the annual revenue of the first
being seventy pounds, and of the other thnty pounds ; and
near his hospital at Durham, rebuilt the school-houses, to the
charge of three hundred pounds. He also built a library
' See Mr. Sim. Gunton's Hist, of lie was one of the commissioners at
Peterburgh, Supplem., p. 339. tlie Savoy conference, where lie yielded
B Basire, p. 19. to some modei-atiiig concessions. See
'" Register and Chronicle Ecclesias- Life of R. Baxter, fol. 1. i. part ii. p.
tical and Civil, &c. by Bishop Keiuift, 305.
edit. 1728. fol. p. 323. Dr. Sanoroft ^ Dr. Smith says, it was only near
preached tli(> consecration sermon ; vitl. sixteen thousand pounds. Vita, ut
Smith, p. 21. supra, p. 21, 2.3.
' Smith, p. 21, 22, 23. In KiGl,
LIFE or COSIX. XIX
near the castle of Durham, the charge wlicrcof, and pictures
M-herewitli he adorned it, amounted to eight Iniudred pounds,
and gave books thereto, to the value of two thousand pounds ;
as also au annual pension of twenty marks for ever to a
library keeper. The college of dissolved prebends at Auck-
land, purchased by Sir Ai'thur Haselrigg, and by him for-
feited to the king, which King Charles the Second gave to
Bishop Cosin in fee, he gave to his successors, bishops of
Durham, for ever ; the value thereof being three hundred
and twenty pounds. He rebuilt the east end of the chapel
at Peter-House, in Cambridge, which cost three hundred and
twenty pounds ; and gave in books to the library of that
college, a thousand pounds. He founded eight scholarships
in the same University; namely, five in Peter-House, of ten
pounds a year each ; and three in Gonvill and Caius college,
of twenty nobles apiece per annum ; both which, together
with a pronsion of eight pounds yearly to the common chest
of these two colleges respectively, amounted to two thousand
five hundred pounds. He likewise made an augmentation of
sixteen pounds a-year to the vicarage of St. Andrews, at
Auckland'. The rest of his numerous benefactions we shall
give an account of in the note [L] . In a word, this generous
bishop, during the eleven years he sat in the see of Durham,
is said to have spent above two thousand pounds a-year, in
pious and charitable uses'".
The two last years of his life he enjoyed but a very in-
different state of health, being very much afflicted with the
stone. At length the ' roaring pains ' of that distemper, as
he used to call them, together Avith a pectoral droj)sy, put an
end to his most valuable life ", at his house in Pall Mall,
Westminster, on the fifteenth of January, 1671-2, when he
was seventy-seven years, one month, and sixteen days old".
In his will, dated December the 11th, 1671, he made a
large and open declaration of his faith [M] .
About the year 1625, he married Frances, daughter of [13 Aug.
Marmaduke Blakeston, M.A.,p by whom he had a son, '^
' Smith, ubi supra, p. 25. '' Archdeacon of the East Riding
■" Basire, ubi supra, p. 79, 80. and prebendary of York and Durham,
n Ibid., p. 86, 87. &c. See Willis, ubi supra, p. 100,
° Smith, ubi supra, p. 27, 28. 180, 269 ; and Basire as above.
XX LIFE OF COSIN.
whom he disinherited on account of his embracing popery
[Mary] [N] ; and foiu' daughters, one married to Sir Gilbert Gerard,
[Eliza- Bart., another to Sir [Thomas] Burton, Bart., and the
belli J -" ' '
youngest to Dr. Denys Granville, brother to the earl of
Bath, and afterwards dean of Durham 'i.
As for the Bishop's bod^^, it was for some time deposited
in a vault in London; and in April, 1672, conveyed to
Bishop's Auckland, in the diocese of Durham ; where, on the
twenty-ninth of that month, it was buried in the chapel be-
longing to the palace, under a tomb of black marble, with an
inscription [O] prepared by the Bishop in his lifetime ^
We shall give an account of his works in the note [P] . As
to his personal qualifications, the Bishop was tall and erect,
and had a grave and comely presence. He had a sound un-
derstanding, well improved with all kinds of useful learning.
And, as for his hospitality, generosity, and charity, they
were so very conspicuous and extensive, that he is justly
reckoned to have been one of the most munificent, if not
the most munificent, of all the bishops of Durham ^ Among
many other services he did to his see, one was the obtaining
a release (in compensation of the loss that see suffered by
taking away the court of Wards and Liveries) of the annuity
or pension of one thousand pounds*, charged upon that
bishopric ever since Queen Elizabeth's days ".
"5 Smith, p. 26, and from private Smith, ibid,
information. s ggg Basire, p. 37, 103.
■■ Smith, p. 28 ; Willis, ubi supra, « Or, eight hmidred and fourscore
P- 251. pounds. 13asire, p. 5(5.
The burial service was read by " See Willis, ubi supra, p. 228, 811.
Guy Carlton, bishop of Bristol and This thousand pounds was for keeping
prebendary of Durham ; and Dr. Isaac a garrison at Benvick against the Scots.
Basire preached the funeral sermon.
APPENDIX.
[A] And in IG'24, con/erred upon him the tenth prebend in the
cathedral church of Durham.'} All the while he enjoyed it, which was
about six-and-thirty years, he was very constant in his residences,
both ordinary and extraordinary, during which he kept a laudable
hospitality, according to the statutes of that Church. So that Dr.
Basire testifies^ that upon search of the register of that cathedral,
he could not find one dispensation for him in all the time he con-
tinued prebendary.
[B] IVas moreover collated by his patron, Bishop Neile, to the rich
rectory of Branspeth.] The parochial church of which he beautified
in an extraordinary manner''.
[C] His Collection of Private Devotions.'] The title of it was, ' A
Collection of Private Devotions ; or, The Hours of Prayer.' Dr.
Smith informs us*^ that it was written at the command of King
Charles the First, who observing that his queen's protestant attend-
ants were frequently reading in ' The Hours of the Virgin Mary,'
and other popish books of devotion, that were set, perhaps on pur-
pose, about the royal apartments, lest they should thereby be tainted
with superstition and other false principles, he ordered a manual of
prayers to be composed for their use, out of the Holy Scriptures,
and the ancient liturgies ; which was accordingly done by Mr.
Cosin. Others affirm'', that it was written at the request of the
countess of Denbigh, the duke of Buckingham's sister. This lady
being then somewhat unsettled in her religion, and warping towards
popery, these Devotions were drawn up to recommend the Church of
England farther to her esteem, and to preserve her in that com-
munion. This book, although furnished with a great deal of good
matter, was not altogether acceptable in the contexture ; although
the title-page sets forth that it was formed upon the model of a book
of private prayers, authorized by Queen Elizabeth in the year 1560^.
To give the reader some part of it ; after the Calendar, it begins
with the Apostles' Creed in twelve articles, the Lord's Prayer in
seven petitions, the Ten Commandments, with the duties enjoined,
* Ubi supra, p. 44, 45. "^ Ubi supra, p. 5, 6.
*> See the Hist, of the Cathedral "^ Collier, Eecl. Hist., vol. ii. p. 742.
Church of Durham, by Sir William *■ Horarium Rrgia Aiithoriiate Edi-
Dugdale, p. 81, at the end of his Hist. turn, ann. 1560 ; and reprinted in 1573,
of St. Paul's, second edit. 1716, fol. cum privilegio, by Will. Seers.
xxn A P P K X D I X.
and the sins forbidden. Then follow the precepts of charitv, the
seven sacraments, the three theological virtues, the three kinds of
good works, the seven gifts of the Holy Ghost, the twelve fruits of
the Holy Ghost, the spiritual and corporal works of mercv, the eight
beatitudes, the seven deadly sins, their opposite virtues, and the four
last things. And, after some explanatory prefaces and introductions,
were subjoined the forms of prayer for the first, third, sixth, and
ninth hours, and likewise for the Vespers and Compline, formerly
called the Canonical Hours. Next to these was the litanv, the seven
penitential psalms, prayers preparatory for receiving the Holy Eucha-
rist, prayers to be used in time of sickness, and at the approach of
death, &c.
Though this book was approved by George Mountain, Bishop of
London, and Ucensed with his own hand, yet it was somewhat sur-
prising at first view, and some moderate persons were shocked with
it, as drawing too near the superstitions of the Church of Rome ; at
least they suspected it as a preparation to further advances. The
top of the frontispiece had the name of Jesus, in three capital letters,
I. H. S. Upon these was a cross, encircled with the sun, supported
by two Angels, with two devout women praying towards it.
This book was severely animadverted upon by Henry Burton, in
his ' Examination of Private Devotions : or the Hours of Praver*^,
&c. ;' and by W. Piynne, in his ' Brief Sm'vey and Censure of Mr.
Cozen's cozenizing Devotions s,'
[D] In 1628 he was concerned, with other members of the Church of
Durham, in a prosecution against Peter Smart, <^-e.] This Peter Smart,
who had been schoolmaster at Durham, was collated Dec. 30, 1609,
to the sixth prebend in the church of Durham, and removed Julv 6,
1614, to the fourth prebend^. He had also other preferments.
Being to preach, July 7, 1628^, in the cathedral cluirch of Dui-ham,
he took for his text Psalm xxxi. 7, ' I hate them that hold of super-
stitious vanities.' From which he took occasion to make a most
bitter invective against some of the bishops, charging them with no
less than popery and idolatry. Among other virulent expressions
he had these — p. 11 : 'The Whore of Babylon's bastardly brood
doting upon their mother's beauty, that painted harlot of the Church
of Rome, have laboured to restore her all her robes and jewels again ;
especially her looking-glass, the mass, m which she may behold her
bravery' — 'The mass coming in, brings with it an inundation of cere-
monies, crosses and crucifixes, chalices and images, copes and candle-
' Lond. 1628, 4to. ' Dr. Nalson says, by mistake, it
s Il)i(l, 1628. was 1638, p. 518. But he was sus-
Willis, as above, p. 266, 268. pendcd for his sermon in 16-31.
A P P E X I) I X. XXIU
sticks, tapers and basons, and a thousand such trinckets ; which we
have seen in this Church, since the communion-tahle was turned into
an altar.' — p. 26. ' I assure you the altar is an idol, a damnable idol
as it is used. I say, they are whores and whoremongers, they com-
mit spiritual fornication, who bow their bodies before that idol, the
altar — &c.'
For this sermon he was questioned, first at Dinham, afterwards in
the High-Commissioned-Court at London ; whence he was removed,
at his own desire, to that at York, where refusing, with great scorn,
to recant, he was, for his obstinacy, degraded, and by sentence at
Common Law, soon after dispossessed of his prebend and livings ;
whereupon he was supplied with 400/. a year by subscription from
the Puritan party '^j which was more than all his preferments
amounted to.
As for Dr. Cosin, he was so far from being Mr. Smart's chief
prosecutor, as he avers, that after he was questioned in the High
Commission at Durham, he never meddled in the matter, save that
once he ^^Tote a letter to the archbishop of York, and the com-
missioners, in his favour^
Mr. Smart's character is not represented to any great advantage.
One author indeed "^ calls him a man ' of a grave aspect, and reverend
presence.' But another, who knew him better", assures us, 'that
he was an old man, of most froward, fierce, and unpeaceable spirit,
&c.' He had not preached in the cathedral church of Durham,
though prebendary of it, for seven years, till he preached that
seditious sermon for which he was questioned. And whdst he held
and enjoyed his preferment, and his health too, he seldom preached
more than once or twice a year.
[E] The Commons sent tip one-and-twenty articles of impeachment
against him.'] They were carried up by one Mr. Rouse, who intro-
duced them with the following speech. ' My Lords, I am com-
manded by the House of Commons, to present your Lordships a
declaration and impeachment against Dr. Cosins, and others, upon
the complaint of Mr. Peter Smart ; which Mr. Smart was a proto-
martyr, or first confessor of note in the late days of persecution.
The whole matter is a tree, whereof the branches and fruit are
manifest in the articles of this declaration.' Then follow these arti-
cles against Dr. Cosin.
1 . That he was the first man that caused the Communion-table in
^ Out of the peculiar contributions Historicum, p. 258, &c. Compare it
at London and elsewhere, gathered up with that in Fuller's Ch. Hist., B. X.
for silenced ministers. p. 173.
' This is Dr. Cosin's own account, "• Fuller, ibid,
as published in Dr. Heylyn's Examen " Dr. Cosin, ubi supra.
c 2
XXIV APPENDIX.
the church of Durham to be removed and set altar-ways, in the
erecting and beautifying whereof, he (being then treasurer) expended
two himdred pounds".
2. That he used to officiate at the west side thereof, turning his
back to the people.
3. That he used extraordinary bowing to it.
4. That he compelled others to do it, using violence to the per-
sons of them that refused so to do ; for instance, once some omitting
it, he comes out of his seat, down to the seat where they sat, being
gentlewomen, called them whores and jades, and pagans, and the
like unseemly words, and rent some of their clothes.
5. That he converted divers prayers in the Book of Common
Prayers, into hymns, to be sung in the choir, and played with the
organ, contrary to the ancient custom of that Church.
6. That whereas it had been formerly a custom in that Church, at
the end of every sermon, to sing a psalm ; this custom, when Dr.
Cosin came thither, was abrogated, and instead thereof, they sung an
anthem in the choir, there being no psalm sung either at the minis-
ter's going up into the pulpit, or at his coming down.
7. That the first Candlemas- day at night, that he had been in
that Church, he caused three hundred wax candles to be set up and
lighted in the church at once, in honour of Our Ladv, and placed
threescore of them upon and about the Altar.
8. That in this church there were rehques of divers images, above
which were remaining the niins of two seraphims, with the picture
of Christ between them, erected in Queen Mary's time, in the time
of popery ; all which, when Queen Elizabeth came to the crowTi,
were demolished by virtue of a commission by her to that intent
granted, which so continued demolished from that time, tiU Dr.
Cosin came to that Church, who, being treasurer, caused the same
to be repaired, and most gloriously painted.
9. That all the time he was unmamed, he wore a cope of white
satin, never officiating in any other, it being resen'ed solely for him,
no man excepting himself making use thereof, which after marriage
he cast off, and never after wore.
10. That there was a knife belonging to the church, kept alto-
gether in the vestry, being put to none but holy uses, as cutting the
bread in the Sacrament and the like ; Dr. Cosin refusing to cut the
same with any other but that, thinking all others that were un-
consecrated, polluted, but that, which he putting holiness in, never
termed but the consecrated knife.
" Mr. Fuller says, that it was a cost 2,000/., with all the appurtenances
marble altar with cherubims, which thereof. See Fuller, tibi supra, p. 173.
APPENDIX. XXV
1 1 . That ill a sermon preached in that church, he did dchver
certain words in disgrace of the reformers of our Church; for
instance, the words were these : ' The reformers of this Church,
when they abohshed the mass, took away all good order, and,
instead of a reformation, made it a deformation!'.'
12. That he seldom or never, in any of his sermons, styled the
ministers of the Word and Sacraments by any other name than
priests, nor the Communion-table by any other name than Altar.
13. That by his appointment there was a cope bought, the seller
being a convicted Jesuit, and afterwards employed in that church,
having upon it the picture of the invisible and incomprehensible
Trinity.
14. That whereas it had been formerly a custom in that Church,
at five of the clock to have morning prayers read, winter and
summer; this custom, when Dr. Cosin came thither, was aban-
doned; and instead thereof was used singing and playing on the
organs, and some few prayers read, and this was called first-service ;
which being ended, the people departed out of the church, returning
at nine o'clock, and having then morning prayers read unto them,
and this was called second-service ; which innovation being misliked,
and complained of by Mr. Justice Hutton, was reformed.
15. That he framed a superstitious ceremony, in fighting the
tapers which were placed on the Altars, which, for instance, was
this ; a company of boys that belonged to the church, came in at
the choir door with torches in their hands lighted, bowing towards
the Altar at their first entrance, bowing thrice before they Hghted
their tapers ; having done, they withdrew themselves, bowing so oft
as before, not once turning their back parts towards the Altar, the
organs all the time going.
16. That he counselled some young students of the University to
be imitators and practisers of his superstitious ceremonies, who,
to ingratiate themselves in his favour, did accordingly ; and being
afterwards reproved for the same, by some of their friends, confessed
that Dr. Cosin first induced them to that practice, and encouraged
them therein.
17. That he used, upon Communion days, to make the sign of
the Cross with his finger, both upon the seats whereon they were to
sit. and the cushions to kneel upon, using some words when he
so did.
r Dr. Nalson informs us that the ' religion.' Which he maJe out hy
Doctor's words were, 'That we must producing his seimon. Nalson, ubi
' not tliink that when the Bishops took supra, p. 702.
' away tlic mass, they took away all
XXVI APPENDIX.
IS. That one sabbath-day there was set up an unnecessary com-
pany of tapers and hghts in the church, which Dr. Hunt, being
then dean, fearing they might give offence, being they were then
unnecessai-y, sent his man to pull them down, who did so ; but
Dr. Cosin being thereat aggrieved, came to the fellow, and there
miscalled him in a most uncivil manner, and began to beat him in
the public view of the congregation, to the great disturbance of the
same.
19. That the dean and chapter of that Church, whereof Dr. Cosin
was one, with many others, being invited to dinner in the town
of Durham, Dr. Cosin then and there spake words derogating from
the king's prerogative : the words were these ; ' The king hath no
more power over the Church than the boy that rubs my horse
heels.'
20. That there being manv of the canons of the said Church
present at that time, amongst the rest there was one took more
notice of his words than the rest, and acquainted one of liis fellow-
canons with them when he came home. This canon being a friend
to Dr. Cosin, told the Doctor that such a man exclaimed of him,
and charged him with words that he should speak at such a time ;
the Doctor presently sends for him, and when he came into the
house, the Doctor desires him to follow him into an inner room,
who did so ; but so soon as he came in, the Doctor shuts the door,
and sets both his hands upon him, calling him rogue and rascal, and
many other names, insomuch that the man fearing he would do him
a mischief, cried out ; Mrs. Cosin coming in, endeavoui'ed to appease
her husband, and, holding his hands, the other ran away.
21. That the Doctor did seek many unjust ways to ensnare this
man, that so he might take a just occasion to put him out of his
place ; but none of them taking effect, he put him out by violence,
having no other reason why he did so, but because he had no good
voice, when he had served the place two years before Dr. Cosin
came thither ; for instance of which unjust ways to ensnare this
man, Dr. Cosia hired a man and woman to pretend a desire of matri-
mony, and to offer a sum of money to this petty canon to contract
matrimony between them in a private chamber, so thereupon to take
advantage of his revenge upon him. This plot being confessed by
the parties, to be first laid by Dr. Cosin, and that they were his
instruments'!.
Besides the several particulars mentioned in these articles,
Mr. Fuller informs us that Dr. Cosin was accused of having bought
'1 Nalson, ubi supra, p. 780, 790; Proceedings of Parliament in 1610,
and the Diiunall Occurrences or Daily and 1611, Lond. 1611. Ito. p. .52, &c.
APPENDIX. XXni
a cope with the Trinity, and God the Father in tlie figure of an old
man ; another with' a crucifix, and the image of Christ, with a red
beard and a bhie cap. And to have made an anthem to be sung, of
the Three Kings of Collen, by the names of Gasper, Baltliazar, and
Melchior"^.
To these articles Dr. Cosin put in his answer, upon oath, before
the House of Lords, as is above related. But seeing afterwards the
substance of them published in INIr. Fuller's Ecclesiastical History*,
he wrote from Paris a letter to Mr. Warren, and Dr. Reves, in his
own vindication, dated April 6, 1658, wherein he declares, as he
had done before the Lords,
1. That the Communion-table in the church of Durham (which
in the bill of complaint and Mr. Fuller's History, is said to be the
marble Altar, with cherubims), was not set up by him (Dr. Cosin),
but by the dean and chapter, (whereof Mr. Smart himself was one,)
many years before jMr. Cosin became prebendary of that Church,
or ever saw the country.
2. That by the public accounts wliich are there registered, it did
not appear to have cost above the tenth part of what is pretended,
appurtenances and all*.
3. That likewise the copes used in that church were brought in
thither long before his (Dr. Cosin's) time, and when Mr. Smart, the
complainant, was prebendary there, who also allowed his part (as he
(Dr. Cosin) was ready to prove by the Act Book) of the money
that they cost, for they cost but little.
4. That as he never approved the picture of the Trinity, or the
image of God the Father in the figure of an old man, or otherwise,
to be made or placed any wdiere at all ; so he was well assured that
there were none such (nor to his knowledge or hearsay ever had
been) put upon any cope that was used there. One tiiere was that
had the story of the Passion embroidered upon it, but the cope that
he used to wear, when at anv time he attended the Commimion-
Service, was of plain white satin only, without any embroiderv' upon
it at all.
5. That what the bill of complaint called the image of Christ,
w'ith a blue cap, and a golden beard, (Mr. Fuller's History says it
was red, and that it was set upon one of the copes,) was nothing else
but the top of Bishop Hatfield's tomb, (set up in the Church, under a
side-arch there, two hundred years before Dr. Cosin was born,) being
a little portraiture, not appearing to be above ten inches long, and
*■ Fuller, Cli. Hist., ubi supra. mentinned in the original articles was
^ B. XI. p. 173. 2000/., though in the printed ones
t By this it seems, that the sum there is only 200/. See above, note o.
XXVIU APPENDIX.
hardly discettiible to the eye what figure it is, for it stands thirty
foot from the ground.
6, That by the local statutes of that Church, (whereunto
Mr. Smart was sworn, as well as Dr. Cosin,) the treasurer was to
give order, that provision should every year be made of a sufficient
number of wax lights for the service of the choir, during all the
winter time : which statute he (Dr. Cosin) observed when he was
chosen into that office, and had order from the dean and chapter,
by capitular act, to do it ; yet upon the Communion-table they that
used to light the candles, never set more than two fair candles, with
a few small sizes near to them, which they put there of pui-pose,
that the people all about might have the better use of them for
singing the psalms, and reading the lessons out of the Bibles ; but
two hundi'ed was a gi-eater number than they used all the Church
over, either upon Candlemas night or any other.
7. That he never forbad (nor any body else that he knew) the
singing of the (metre) psalms in the church, which he used to sing
daily there himself, with other company, at morning prayer. But
upon Sundays and holydays, in the choir, before the sermon, the
Creed was sung, (and that plainly for every one to understand,) as it
is appointed in the Communion-book ; and after the sermon, was sung
a part of a psalm, or some other anthem taken out of the Scripture,
and first signified to the people where they might find it.
8. That so far was he from making any anthem to be sung of the
Three Kings of Colen, as that he made it, when he first saw it, to be
torn in pieces, and he himself cut it out of the old song-books be-
longing to the chorister's school, with a pen-knife that lay by, at his
very first coming to that college. But he was sure that no such
anthem had been sung in the choir during all his time of attendance
there, nor (for aught that any of the eldest persons of the church
and town could tell, or ever heard to the contrary), for fifty or three-
score years before, or more,
9. That there was indeed an ordinaiy knife, pro\aded and laid
ready among other things belonging to the administration of the
Communion, for the cutting of the bread, and divers other uses in
the church- vestry. But that it was ever consecmted, or so called,
otherwise than as Mr. Smart, and some of his followers had, for their
pleasure, i)ut that appellation upon it, he (Dr. Cosin) never heard,
nor believed any body else had, that lived at Durham ".
The rest of the articles mentioned above, Mr. Smart could not
" This Letter is printed in Dr. Hey- wards asked Dr. Cosin's pardon for
lyn's Examcn llistoricum, &c. Ap- what he had said as above, relating to
pcndix, p. 283, &c. Dr. Fnllcr after- him. See Worthier, in Durham, p. 2f)o.
APPENDIX. XXIX
prove, and Dr. Cosin gave a very satisfactory answer to them,
remaining upon the rolls of Parliament. But as Mr. Fuller did not
specify them all, the Doctor did not think it necessary to repeat in
this letter his ans\Yer to each of them.
Upon the whole, therefore, as we cannot, on the one hand, enough
wonder at the weakness of Dr. Cosin, for inventing and pressing the
observance of such ceremonies and insignificant things, as some of
those above mentioned ; so, on the other hand, who can be suffi-
ciently amazed at the confidence of P. Smart, in charging the
Doctor with things which he could so easily disprove. And what
must be thought or said of that House of Commons which would
encourage and receive such kinds of accusations.
[F] Particularly once with the prior of the English Benedictines
at Pa?'is.^ The Prior's name was — Robinson. And the controversy
between him and Dr. Cosin was managed both by word and writing.
The argument was, concerning the validity of the ordination of our
priests, &c., in the Church of England. And the Doctor had the
better so far, that he could never get from the Prior any reply to his
last answer.
This conference was undertaken to fix a person of honour then
wavering about that point. The sum of the conference was wTitten
by Dr. Cosin to Dr. Morley, afterwards Bishop of Winchester, in
two letters, bearing date June 11 and July 11, 1645-''.
[G] There were made him very great offers of jireferment.'] One
author speaks upon this point to the following purpose : V' Dr. Cosin
being by the violence of the persecution which was raised against
the episcopal party, forced to quit his native countiy, and seek a
retreat amongst the papists in France ; he continued a most im-
shaken protestant, and bold propagator of the Reformed rehgion,
even to the hazard of his life ; and when the necessitous condition
to which he was reduced, and aU the advantageous offers imaginable
were made him to embrace the Roman communion, yet were not
those temptations capable of removing him from his foundation,
insomuch, that despairing of ever obliging him to change his reli-
gion, the papists were so enraged at him, as, I have heard it fi'om
his own mouth, frequently to threaten him with assassination, and
that he should not escape pistol or poignard : and in revenge,
which I have heard him aver was the most sensible affliction that
ever befel him in his whole life, they inveigled his only son from
him to become a papist ^.'
'' Basire, ul'i supra, p. o9, GO. ing in a Jesuit's school, as were many
y Nalson, as above, p. .519. others of our youths during tlie civil
' He was educated in grammar learn- war, wliich corrupted him. Smith, p. 13.
XXX APPENDIX.
We may add this other testimony of Doctor Cosin's attachment to
the Reformed rehgion. ' Whilst he remained in France, he was the
AtUis of the protestant rehgion, supporting the same with his piety
and learning, confirming the wavering therein, yea, daily adding
proselytes (not of the meanest rank) thereunto".'
[H] He kept a friendly intercourse and correspondence with the
protestant ministers at Charenton.'] One author indeed tells us^, that
after getting over into France, he neither joined with the church of
French protestants at Charenton, nigh Paris, nor with the papists, —
hut confined himself to the Church of old Enghsh protestants therein.'
But Dr. Cosin, in opposition to the former part of that asser-
tion, declared to all the world, that he never refused to join with the
protestants there, or any where else, in all things wherein they joined
with the Church of England'^. And that he was constant in the same
opinion, appears by a letter of his, dated from Paris, Feb. 7, 1650,
to one Mr. Cordel, then at Blois, who seemed shy to communicate
with the protestants there, upon the scruple of their inorderly ordi-
nation, in which letter he has this passage : — ' To speak mv mind
freely to you, T would not wish any of ours absolutely to refuse
communicating in their church, or determine it to be unlawful, for
fear of a greater scandal that may thereupon arise, than we can tell
how to answer or excuse'^.'
[I] And permitted him sometimes to officiate in their congregations. "]
Where he baptized, married, and had even some persons ordained
priests and deacons by English bishops, according to the several
forms in the Book of Common Prayer. With their consent likewise,
he did, in the year 1645, ' solemnly, in his priestly habit, with his
surplice, and with the office of burial used in the Church of Ens--
land, inter, at Charenton, the body of Sir William Carnaby, Knt.,
not without the troublesome contradiction and contention of the
Romish curate of that parish^.'
[K] He repaired the castle of Bishop's Auckland.'] This (the chief
countiy seat of the bishops of Durham), was, upon the seizure of the
Bishop's land, bestowed upon Sir Arthur Haselrigg ; who designino-
to make it his principal seat, and not liking the old fashioned build-
ing, resolved to erect a new and beautiful fabric, all of one pile,
according to the most elegant fashion of those times. To fit him-
self therefore with materials for this his new house, he pulled down
a most magnificent and large chapel, built by Anthony Bek, bishop
■» Fuller's Wortliics, in Durham, -i See Basire, p. 58, 59. and note
p. 295. [P]No. 2.
'' Fuller, iibi supra. e Basire, p. 58. and Smith, p. 19.
" In his letter, inserted in Heylyn's See particularly Examen Ilistorieum,
Examen Histcricum, p. 283, iS.c. p. 291, 292.
APPENDIX. XXxi
of Durham, in the time of King Edward the First ; with the stone
whereof, and an addition of what was deficient, he erected his new
fabric in a large court, on the east side of the castle, l^ut Jiishop
Cosin, soon after his consecration, taking notice that the greatest
part of the materials, used in that building, were taken from the
above-mentioned consecrated chapel, he not only refused to make use
of it for his habitation, though it was commodiously contrived, and
nobly built, but took it wholly down, and with the stone thereof built
another beautiful chapel on the north side of that great court ; and,
under the middle aisle thereof, caused a convenient vault to be made
for his own sepulture *^.
[L] The rest of his numerous benefactions, SfC.'] Tliey were as fol-
lows : — He gave to the cathedral at Durham a fair carved lectern,
and litany-desk, with a large scolloped silver paten, gilt, for the
use of the communicants there, which cost forty-five pounds.
Upon the new building of the Bishop's Court, Exchequer, and
Chancery, and towards the erecting of two Sessions-houses at Dur-
ham, he gave a thousand pounds.
Moreover, he gave towards the redemption of Christian captives at
Algiers, five Imndred pounds.
Towards the relief of the distressed loyal party in England, eight
hundred pounds.
For repairing the banks in Howdenshire, a hundred marks.
Towards the repair of St. Paul's cathedral, hi London, fifty pounds.
By his will he bequeathed to the poor of his hospitals at Durham
and Auckland, to be distributed at his funeral, six pounds.
To the poor people of the coixntry, coming to his funeral, twenty
pounds.
To poor prisoners detained for debt, in the goals of Durham, York,
Peterborough, Cambridge, and Norwich, fifty pounds.
To the poor people within the precincts of the cathedral at Nor-
wich, and within the parish of St. Andrew's there, in which he was
born, and educated in his minoritv, twenty pounds.
To the poor of Durham, Auckland, Darlington, Stockton, Gates-
head, and Branspeth, (all in the bishopric of Durham,) thirty pounds.
To the poor in the parishes of Chester-in-the-Street, Houghton-
le-Spring, North- AUerton, Creike, and Howden, (all lordships be-
longing to the bishops of Durham,) forty pounds.
Towards the re-building of St. Paul's cathedral, in London, when
it should be raised five yards from the ground, a hundred pounds.
To the cathedral of Norwich, whereof the one half to be bestowed
on a marble tablet, with an inscription, in memory of Dr. John
' Dugdale, ubi supra, p. 82.
XXXU A P P E X U I X,
Overall, some-time bishop there, (whose chaplain he had been,) the
rest for providing some useful ornaments for the Altar, forty pounds.
Towards the re-edifying of the north and south sides of the col-
lege chapel at Peterhouse, in Cambridge, suitable to the east and
west ends, already by him perfected, two hundred pounds.
Towards the new building of a chajjcl at Emanuel college, in
Cambridge, fifty pounds.
To the children of Mr. John Heyward, late prebendary of Litch-
field, as a testimony of his gratitude to their deceased father, who, in
his Lordship's younger years, placed him with his uncle. Bishop
Overall, twenty pounds apiece.
To the dean and chapter of Peterborough, to be employed for the
use of the poor in that to\^Ti, a hundred pounds.
To the poor of Durham, Bianspeth, and Bishop's Auckland, to be
distributed as his two daughters (the Lady Gerard, and the Lady
Burton) should think best, a hundred pounds.
To some of his domestic servants he gave a hundred marks ; to
some fifty pounds ; and to the rest half a year's wages, over and
above their last quarter's pay?.
[M] In his will he made a large arid open declaration of his faithJ]
Wherein, after repeating the substance of the Apostles' and Nicene
Creeds, he condemns and i-ejects whatsoever heresies or schisms, the
ancient Catholic and Universal Church of Christ, with an unanimous
consent, had rejected and condemned ; together with all the modern
fautors of the same heresies ; sectaries and fanatics, who, being car-
ried on with an evil spirit, do falsely give out, they are inspired of
God. As the Anabaptists, New Independents, and Presbyterians of
our country, a kind of men hurried away with the spirit of malice,
disobedience, and sechtion.
' Moreover, (adds he,) I do profess with holy asseveration, and from
my very heart, that I am now, and ever have been from my youth,
altogether free and averse from the corruptions and impertinent new-
fangled, or papistical, superstitions and doctrines,— long since intro-
duced, contrary to the holy Scriptures, and the ndes and customs
of the ancient Fathers. But in what part of the world soever any
Churches are extant, bearing the name of Christ, and professing the
true Catholic faith and religion, worshipping and calling upon God the
Father, the Son, and the Holv Ghost, with one heart and voice, if I
be now hindered actually to join with them, either by distance of
countries, or variance amongst men, or by any hindrance whatsoever ;
yet always in my mind and affection I join and unite with them ;
B Dugrlale, ubi siipva, p. 83, 8i, 8.) ; and Sniifli, p. 2-5, 26, 27.
APPENDIX. XXXlll
which I desire to be chiefly understood of protestants, and the best
Reformed Churches, &c.' This part of his will was written in
Latin, and the latter part, containing his benefactions, in English''.
[N] He had a son, whom he disinherited on account of his em-
bracing popenj.'] See above, note [G] of this article. He was
prevailed upon, not only to embrace popery, but also to take
religious orders in the Church of Rome ; and although Dr. Cosin
used all the ways imaginable, and even the authority of the French
king, which, by his interest he had procured, to regain him out of
their power, and from their persuasion, yet all proved ineffectual.
Whereupon he disinherited him, allowing him only an annuity of one
hundred pounds'. He pretended to turn again, but relapsed before
the Bishop's decease.
[O] With an inscription. '\ Which runs thus : —
IN NON MORITURAM MEMORIAM
JOHANXIS COSIN.
EPISCOPI DUNELMENSIS,
Qfl HOC SACELLUM CONSTRUXIT,
ORNAVIT, ET DEO CONSECRAVIT,
ANN. DOM. M, DC, LXV.
IN FESTO S. PETRI.
OBIIT XV DIE MENSIS JANUARII
ANNO DOMINI, MDCLXXI.
ET IIIC SEPULTUS EST, EXPECTANS
FELICEM CORPORIS SUI RESURRECTIONEM,
AC VITAM IN CCELIS /ETERNAM.
REQUIESCAT IN PACE.
Round a marble stone on the floor are also these words engraved :
BEATI MORTUI
QUI MORIUNTUR IN DOMINO,
REQUIESCUNT ENIM
A LABORIBUS SUIS ^.
i. e. To the never-dying memory of John Cosin, bishop of Dur-
ham, who built and adorned this chapel, and consecrated it to God
in 1665, June 29. He died the 15th day of January, in the year of
our Lord 1671, and is buried here, waiting for the happv resur-
rection of his body, and eternal life in heaven. Let him rest
in peace.
^ See Basire, p. Ill, &c. Smith, '' Smith, ubi supra, p. 28 ; and
p. 55, &c. J. Le Neve's Monumenta Anglicana,
i Nalson, as above, p. 519; and from 1650 to 1C79, p. 171.
Smith, p. 13, 20.
XXXIV APPENDIX.
Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord, for they rest from
their labours.
[P] JJ^e shall give an account of his works, &c.] Besides his Col-
lection of Private Devotions, mentioned above, he published ' A
Scholastical History of the Canon of the Holy Scripture ; or The
Certain and indubitable Books thereof, as they are received in the
Church of England.' London, 1C57 ; 4to. reprinted in 1G72. This
history is deduced from the time of the Jevs-ish Church, to the year
1546, that is, the time when the Council of Trent corrupted, and
made unwarrantable additions to, the ancient canon of the Holy
Scriptures. Consequently it was directed against the papists, and
was written by the author during his exile at Paris. He dedicated
it to Dr. M. Wren, bishop of Ely, then a prisoner in the Tower.
Dr. P. Gunning had the care of the edition '.
Since the Bishop's decease the following books and tracts of his
have been published.
1 . ' A Letter to Dr. Colhns, concerning the Sabbath,' dated from
Peterhouse, Jan. 24, 16S5™. In which, speaking first of the morality
of the sabbath, he affirms that the keeping of that particular day
was not moral, neither by nature binding all men, nor bv precept
binding any other men but the Jews, nor theiii farther than Christ's
time. But then, adds he, whether one day of seven, at least, do not
still remain immutably to be kept by us Christians, that have God's
will and example before, and by ^'irtue of the rules of reason and
religion, is the question. And for this he decides in the affirmative.
Then he proves, that the keeping of our Sunday is immutable, as
being grounded upon divine institution, and apostolical tradition,
which he confirms by several instances. Next he shews, that the
Schoolmen were the first who began to dispute or deny this day to
be of apostolical institution, on purpose to set up the pope's power,
to whom, they said, it belongeth, either to change or abrogate
the day.
Towards the end, he lays down these three positions against the
puritans: I. 'The observation of the Sunday in every week is not
commanded us by the fourth commandment, as they say it is.'
2. ' Nor is our Sunday to be observed according to the rule of the
fourth commandment, as they say it is.' 3. ' Nor hath it the qualities
and conditions of the sabbath annexed to it, as they say it hath.'
n. There is published, ' A Letter from our author to IVIr. Cordel,
dated Paris, Feb. 7, 1650.' See above note [H]. It is printed at
Basire, p. GO ; and Smith, p. 17. raria, &c. Loiul. 1723, Ito. No. V.
"' And printed in Bibliotheca Lite- p. 33, &c.
A 1' r E N D I X. XXXV
the end of a pamphlet, entitled, ' The Judgment of the Church of
England, in the case of Lay Baptism, and of Dissenters' Baptism".'
III. ' Regni Angliee religio Catholica, prisca, casta, defa-cata ;
omnibus Cliristianis monarchis, principibus, ordinibus, ostcnsa.
Anno MDCLii.' i. e. A short scheme of the ancient and pure doc-
trine and discipline of the Church of England". Written at the
request of Sir Edward Hyde, afterwards Earl of Clarendon p.
IV. ' Historia Transubstantiationis Papalis ; cui pr?emittitur, atque
opponitur, tum S. Scriptura?, tum veterum patrum, et reformatarum
ecclesiarum doctrina Catholica, de sacris symbolis, et pra?sentii!l
Christi in Sacramento Eucharistise.' i. e. The History of Popish
Transubstantiation, &c., written by the author at Paris, for the use
of some of his countrymen, who were frequently attacked upon that
point by the papists. It was published by Dr. Durell, at London^
1675, 8vo., and translated into English in 167G, by Luke de Beau-
lieu, Svo.i There is a second part still in manuscript.
V. ' The differences in the chief points of religion, between the
Roman Catholics and us of the Church of England ; together with
the agreements which we, for our parts, profess, and are ready to
embrace, if they, for theirs, were as ready to accord with us in the
same. Written to the Countess of Peterborough^.'
VI. ' Notes on the Book of Common- Prayer.' Published by
Dr. William Nicholls, at the end of his Comment on the Book of
Common-Prayer, Lond. 1710, fol.
VII. ' Account of a Conference in Paris, between Cyril, Arch-
bishop of Trapezond, and Dr. John Cosin.' Printed in the same
book.
The following pieces were also wiitten by Bishop Cosin, but never
printed.
1 . ' An Answer to a popish pamphlet, pretending that St. Cyprian
was a papist.'
2. 'An Answer to four queries of a Roman Cathohc, about the
Protestant Religion.'
3. ' An Answer to a paper delivered by a popish Bishop to the
Lord Inchiquin.'
4. ' Annales Ecclesiastici,' imperfect.
5. 'An Answer to Father Robinson's papers, concerning the
validity of the OrcUnations of the Church of England.' See above,
note [F.]
" 2nd edit. Lond. 1712, 8vo. •■ Basire, p. 67.
° Piinted at the end of Dr. Smith's ^ Printed at the end of the Cor-
Life of Bishop Cosin. ruptions of the Church of Rome, by
f Smith, p. 15. Bishop Bull.
1 Ibid., p. 16, 17.
XXX\ 1 APPENDIX.
G. ' Historia Conciliorum,' imperfect.
7. 'Against the forsakers of the Church of England, and their
seducers in this time of her trial.*
8. ' Chronologia Sacra,' imperfect.
9. 'A Treatise concerning the abuse of Auricular Confession in
the Church of Rome^'
By all which learned works, as one obsen'es", and his abilities,
quick apprehension, solid judgment, variety of reading, &c., mani-
fested therein, he hath perpetuated his name to posterity, and suffi-
ciently confuted, at the same time, the calumnies industriously spread
against him, of his being a papist, or popishly inclined'' ; which
brought on him a severe persecution, followed with the plunder of all
his goods, the sequestration of his whole estate, and a seventeen
years' exile.
' Basire, p. (57, 68. erubescant jam schismaticonxm filii de
" Fuller's Worthies, in Durham, parentum avorumque convitiis, men-
p. 294. daciis, et calumniis, iu Cosinum ; p. 18.
" Therefore, as Dr. Smith observes,
)
THE DEAD MAN'S REAL SPEECH.
A FUNERAL SERMON,
PREACHED ON HEB. XI. 4.
UPON THE TWENTY- NINTH DAY OF APRIL, 1672,
AT THE FUNERAL OF THE RIGHT REVEREND FATHER IN GOD
JOHN,
LATE LORD BISHOP AND COUNT PALATINE OF DURHAM,
BY ISAAC BASIRE, D.D.,
CHAPLAIN IN ORDINARY TO HIS MAJESTY,
AND ARCHDEACON OF NORTHUMBERLAND.
THE DEAD MAN'S REAL SPKECIf.
Hebrews xi. 4.
By it, he, be'tny dead, yet speaketh.
* Know you not tliat a great man is fallen in Israel?' tins 2 Sam. 3.
was DavicVs noble epitaph over Abner^ though his rebel ; and '
how much more may this be our just preface to this solemn
funeral, to be sure, over a better man than was Abner ?
Therefore in king David's words I may truly say again,
' Know you not that a great man is now fallen in our Israel?'
a great man indeed, as shall appear before we take our final
leave of him. We may be sure greater than Abner, not only
in his state, but, which is the crown of all true greatness,
in his graces and beneficence ; in this indeed and in truth,
greater than Abner. Yet Abner was a great man, for he
Avas a general in the field ; but on the wrong side, the rebel's
side. Our great man a general not only in the fields but,
which is much more, a general in this Church, I mean, his
diocese (a great one) ; and in both these great capacities,
constantly loyal, ad exemplmn. And yet as high as this great
man was so lately, behold how low he is laid down now, who
yet must be laid down lower, as you shall see by and by.
Such spectacles of mortality ought to be to us survivors tot
specida, so many true looking-glasses, wherein whatever our
artificial looking-glasses may flatter us, with what our living
faces seem to be now, this natural looking-glass tells us
plainly to our faces, what all our dead faces shall be, must
be, then; God knows how soon. 'He being dead yet
" The Lord Bisliop of Durham is mission cumuldlivc, and so still under
lieutenant-general of this county, as ah the king, who is always the sovereign
antiquo ex officio, so ex abundunti per of all estates in his realms.
iiKtndatum, by the king's gracious com-
d2
xl THE DEAD MAN's REAL SPEECH.
speaketli' out mortality to us all; so many funerals, so
many warning-pieces to us all to prepare for our last and
Eccles. 7. greatest issue. This, in the judgment of the Wise Man, is
the best use we can make of our access to the house of
mourning, such as this house is at present; therefore the
living should lay it to his heart ; Avliich that we may all do,
let us pray with the spirit, and in the words of king David,
Ps. 90. 12. 'O teach us to number our days that we may apply our
hearts unto wisdom.^
Can. 55. Ye shall further pray for Christ's Holy Catholic
Church, &c.
Hebrews xi. 4.
The scope of this text, which must be the aim of the
sermon, is this, to stir up all the faithful living to imitate
the faithful that are dead ; whereof this chapter is the sacred
roll upon the divine records, down from Abel unto the
patriarchs, the judges, the kings, the prophets, &c. ; that is,
Heb.6. 12. that we should endeavour to become the followers of them
who through faith and patience inherit the promises.
The text is short, but the lesson is long ; that is, to live so
now, as we may die well at last, and by our good works speak
when we are dead.
The parts are two, which do express two states of man.
I. The state of death, ' he being dead,' which is the priva-
tion of the life of nature common to all men ; on which frail
life most men doat so much, because they have no care for,
nor hope of a better life.
II. The state of a Hfe after death ; that is, the life of glory,
implied in these words, 'he speaketh;' for speech is the
evidence of a living man ; ergo, Abel, though dead in the
body, yet is still alive in the spirit.
The first is a corrosive to the state of nature; but the
second comes in as a cordial to all those who are in the state
of grace.
Ex. 14.20. Tliis text appears much like the Israelites' guide in the
Heb. 12. 1. -1 , .. 1 , , ,
Wilderness ; it was a cloud, and that no ordinary cloud, but
such a cloud as was dark on the one side, and light on the
other side ; dark towards the Egyptians, but light towards the
Israelites. Even so is death dark and sad to the unbelievers
A FUNERAL SERMON. xli
and imj)enitent, but lightsome and welcome to all true
penitents and believers.
1. To begin with the first, the state of death. jNIan in the
state of innocency was created capable of three lives; the life
corporal, life spiritual, and life eternal.
The first is the life of nature ; a transitory life.
The second is the life of grace ; a life permanent, but upon
condition of perseverance in an uniform obedience to God.
The third is life eternal; the life of glory; the hfe of the Epii. j. is.
saints triumphant; of the elect Angels; yea, the life of God
Himself, and therefore a life immutable, interminable.
2. Two of these three lives, the life natural and spiritual,
man had tlicn in present possession ; and the tliii'd in a sure
reversion after the expiration of but one life, and that a short
one too, but a span long ; this present life is no more, by
king David's just measure ; ' Behold, thou hast made my Ps. m. a.
days as it were a span long,' in comparison of eternity.
3. Man, by his apostasy from God, through the first
original sin of wilful incogitancy, and through pride, did soon
deprive himself of all these three lives at once ; and so ac-
cording to the just sentence of God, pronounced upon man
aforehand for a fair warning, morte morieris, ' Thou slialt die Gen. 2. 17.
the death,' man was justly precipitated from that high state
of innocence and felicity into the base and damnable state of
sin and misery; whereby every man, none excepted, but the
God and man, Christ Jesus, is now by original sin become
subject to a threefold death; first corporal, secondly spiritual,
and thirdly, without repentance, eternal.
The first is death corporal ; which is a total, but not final,
separation of the soul from the body ; the sad real text before
our eyes.
The second is death spiritual ; a far worse kind of death, a
state of sin, which is a separation of the soul from the grace Ps. 30. ->.
and favour of God, which is life itself, without which we are
all by nature dead in trespasses and sins, children of wrath; Epii. 2. i.
no better.
The third and worst of all is death eternal ; and therefore
called in Holy Scripture the great death, the second death ; Rev. 20. c.
because it is a final, total, and eternal separation of both soul
and body from the glorious presence, beatifical vision, and
xlii
■.f^
THE DEAD MAN S REAL SPEECH.
adraira])lc and unspeakable fruition of God Himself; Whom
as to serve here on earth is the life of grace, so to enjoy in
lieaven is the life of glory, which is life everlasting.
4. The first of these three, death temporal, none of us can
avoid, die we must, die we shall ; God prepare us all for it !
But as the thing, death, is certain for the matter; so for the
manner, how mc shall die, in or out of oiu* wits, as in
frenzies, &c. ; where we shall die, amongst friends or amongst
foes; when we shall die, whether in youth or in old age;
which way we shall die, whether by a sudden, violent, or
painful death, which God in mercy arrest from us all, none
of us all knows ; and therefore our best course is, while Ave
may, by a lively faith, timely repentance, and real amend-
ment of life, to prepare for death''; and then, come death in
what shape it will and welcome, we shall not die unprepared.
Yet it concerns us all frequently and seriously to think of
these great quatuor novisshna ; death, judgment, heaven, and
Dent. 32. hcll. It is Moses's passionate wish, ' O that they were wise,
^'^" that they understood this, that they would consider their
latter end;' since it is appointed for all men once to die, and
Heb.ii. 27. after that comes judgment. The vulgar translation renders
it statutum est; death is an imiversal statute-law to all
mankind, and so it is both for authority of co-action and
certainty of execution ; for it is grounded upon two of the
greatest attributes of God, which are.
First, God's infallible truth; for the commination w^as
directed unto man, and that also in mercy, to forewarn him
that he might not sin.
Secondly, God's exact justice, which requires the execution
of the divine sentence to be done upon the same nature that
had sinned. Man did sin, therefore man must suffer, that is,
man must die ; and because the first man, Adam, was the
original root and general representative of all mankind,
Adam's offspring, therefore all men must die, (pray God we
all may die well,) or if they live to the end of the world, yet
1 Cor. 15. they must suffer a change at the least, at the last, which
^^- change, whatever it be, (for it is a mystery,) will be equivalent
*" S. Aug. de Discipl. cap. 2. [cap. vi.Kerit. Audeo dicere, iioii potest male
xii. 0pp., toni. vi. col. 436. edit. Bene- mori, qui bene vixerit.
diet.] Non potest male mori, (jiii bene
A FUNERAL SERMON. xHii
to a death ; so that tlicrc Hcs an imivorsal necessity to nndcr-
go a death, some kind of death.
In tlie ancient register of the jNTacrolni, those long-lived
patriarchs, Adam lived nine hundred and thirty years, and Gen. .';. :>.
he died ; Methnselah, the longest liver of all mankind, lived
nine hnndrcd and sixty-nine years, and he died &c. ; that is
the burthen-song of them all; neither Methuselah the ancicnt-
est, nor Sampson the strongest, nor Solomon the wisest of men
could exempt themselves from the fatal necessity of death.
Seneca"^ himself, though but a heathen philosopher, being igno-
rant of the original cause of death, yet observing the generality
of the event of death, drew his topic of consolation to his
friend Polvbius, sad for the death of his brother, from this
necessity of death. But God be thanked, we Christians
have better topics of comfort for the death of our Christian
friends past, or our own death a-coming, by opposing, through
faith, against the terror of our dissolution by death, the con-
sideration of our admirable and comfortable conjunction
with Christ our head after death. This glorious state is by
St. Paul styled 'the manifestation of the sons of God,' for Rom.8.]!).
which by a natural instinct the whole creation groaneth with
an earnest expectation of the accomplishment. The word in
the original is very significant, diroKapahoKia, which betokens [ See
the looking for some person or thing with lifting up of the ^pj-'^f'"^'
liead, or stretching out their necks with earnest intention
and observation to see when the person or thing looked for
shall appear ; as a poor prisoner condemned looks out at the
grates for a gracious pardon. And if the creatures inanimate
&c., do so earnestly pant for the final redemption of the
sons of God, how mncli more we, being the parties princi-
pally concerned ? This made St. Paul, as it were with the
hoised up sails of hope and desire, the affections of his soul,
to long to be dissolved and to be with Christ. The original Phii. 1.2,;.
imports to loosen, or to launch forth, as a ship from a foreign °^^^"'
port for a happv voyage towards her wished-for haven at [-^ee
^ ir. . D Schleus-
horae. ner.]
5. I have so much Christian charity for the surviving
*•■ [Maximum ergo solatium est, cogi- Senecrelib. deeonsolationeadPolybium,
tare id sil)i accidispe quod ante se passi inter Opp., p. G92. edit. P>ir. l(JH).]
sunt oniiies, oninesque passuri. L. A.
6.(TTopyoi
xliv THE DEAD MAN's REAL SPEECH.
noble relations of the great man deceased, as to believe that
if they could with their wishes and tears waft him over back
from heaven to labour again on earth, they would not do it,
if they loved him indeed, and not rather themselves. It is
an excellent observation of Isidore ^ Pelusiota — ^he lived above
twelve hundred years ago — who commenting on these words
of our Saviour's compassion for Lazarus expressed by His
tears, that it was not at the death of Lazarus, but that it was
Joh. 11.35. at his resurrection that ' Jesus wept,^ a real demonstration of
His humanit}', both natural and moral. This Father's note
upon that difference is this, that our Saviour Christ's love
towards Lazarus was a rational love, yea a divine love, not
as ours towards our dead friends too too oft, too carnal or
natural, or at the best a human love, if not a self-love; we
wish them alive for our own ends. True it is, that it is very
laAvful, and also very fit, to pay our deceased friends their
due tribute of grief, and to let nature have her course, lest
Rom. 1.31. we should seem or appear without natural affection ; but
pro^dded always that the current of nature do not overflosv
the banks of reason, much more the banks of religion settled
by St. Paul, who would not have Christians to be sorry for
1 Thes. 4. their deceased friends, as others who have no hope ; for
there is a lively hope of a joyful meeting again in the state
of glory, if we in the state of grace do follow the saints
deceased. Upon this consideration is worth the observing
the different manner of mourning of Joseph for his father
Gen. 50. Jacob, liis dear and near relation, for Joseph mourned seven
days only ; and of the Egyptians mourning seventy days for
the same Jacob, a stranger to them. The reason of the
difference is, because the Egyptians were unbelievers ; but
Joseph was a believer of the resurrection, and of a glorious
meeting once again with his deceased father, from thence-
forth never to be separated. This posy of sacred medita-
tions I do now present to the noble relations of the deceased;
desiring them to accept this offer, and to use it as a spiritual
handkerchief to wipe off, if not drain, the spring of tears for
this their deceased support.
6. Meanwhile our main care must be not to forfeit that
•' [Isid. Pelus. Epist. Theodosio 6 Kvpios. Lib. iii. ep. 173. p. 207. edit,
presbytero, 5ia t\ inl Aa^dpcfi fSd.Kpvcrei' fol. Par. 1638.]
13.
3, 10.
A FUNERAL SERMON. xlv
glorious meeting by a course of life contrary to the good
example of the saints departed; but instantly to resolve
earnestly to study, constantly to endeavour, to live well, that
is to say, to make the will of God the rule of our life, and
the honour of God the end of our life; this is to live unto Rom. it.
7 8
the Lord, that is, in subjection unto Ilim; and then we may '
be sure to die in the Lord, that is, under His protection,
both of body and soul, for evermore.
7. You may be pleased to remember that our text was
two-faced, and therefore we compared it to the Israelites'
guide through the wilderness, a cloud ; we are now past
the dark side of it, death, ' he being dead/ We must now
face about and cheerfully behold the bright side of the cloud,
wherein the dead speaketh, and here we have
1. The speaker, 'he.'
2. The speech implied, ' he speaketh/
3. The time expressed, 'yet;' that is, after death :
' He being dead, yet speaketh/
8. First, the speaker is Abel, whose name bears mankind's ^3,-1
universal motto in the holy tongue, that is, vanity ; for when \,\^(^y-i
all is done, ' vanity of vanities, all is vanity,' until the spirit ^^^1- i- 5.
of man 'return to God Who gave it;' till then, whatever ps. so/s/
pride may prompt vain man, verily every man living in his
best estate, is altogether vanity. Selah !
Secondly, for his trade, he was a herdsman, for he offered
to God the best of his flock, in due homage and as a figure
of that Lamb of God Which was to come to 'take away the Joh. 1. 29.
sins of the world.' No doubt he was well instructed by his
parents, Adam and Eve, of whose conversion and salvation to
doubt, (since the promise of the Blessed Seed preached unto Gen. ;i. 15.
them by Almighty God Himself after their fall, and which
we must in reason suppose was apprehended and applied by
them to themselves tlii'ough faith, lest God's preaching should
prove vain : such a suspicion or doubt of their eternal state)
were in us, their posterity, an odious want of charity, and
against the current of the ancient Fathers^, who give for it this
probable reason, that God did expressly cm'se the serpent and
the earth, but God did not at all curse either Adam or Eve ;
^ Iren. Epiph. Chrysost. Augustin. vii. § 112. edit. fol. Colon. 1622.]
&e. [See Peier. in Genes., cap. v. lib.
Xlvd THE DEAD MAn's REAL SPEECH.
but contrariwise, God in mercy did bestow upon Adam and
Eve tlie original and fundamental blessing of the Promised
Seed, the Messiah, which is Christ Jesus our Lord and
Saviour, in Whom all Adam and Eve's posterity should be
blessed. And therefore they are not to be concluded Avithin
the number of the damned crew, upon whom shall be pro-
Mat. 25. nounced that dreadful final sentence of Ite maledicti ; ' Go ye
cursed.' As a clear evidence of Adam and Eve's faith, we
produce their works, namely the godly education of their
children, Cain and Abel, in God's true religion, to offer cor-
poral sacrifices &c., Avitli a spiritual reference, and therefore
with faith in the only expiatory and satisfactory sacrifice to
Gal. 4. \. be performed in the fulness of time by the person of the
Messiah, the second Adam, for the saving of mankind, as the
first Adam was in the damning of mankind ; both the Adams
being public representatives of all mankind, as the first in
the fall, so the second in the resurrection.
9. This just apology for our first parents, Adam and Eve,
I thought it my filial duty to offer unto all mankind, Adam's
offspring; once for all to stop the mouths of censorious
children unmindful of their original duty, and of the rule
Gen. 'J. 22, parentinn mores non sunt arguendi. Shem and Japhet were
^'^' blessed for turning away their faces from their father's
'&
nakedness; but wicked Cham was for outfacing it cursed
with a grievous cursed
10. It is very observable, that God had respect unto Abel
first, and then to his sacrifice; to intimate that God first
ver. 1. accepts the person and then his service ; for Abel offered by
faith, but Cain without faith, for want of which God rejected
the person of Cain, (though the elder brother,) and conse-
quently his sacrifice.
Hence observe, that two men may come and worship God
with the same kind of outward worship, and yet differ much
in the inward manner and success of their service to God ;
' Tliis curse sticks to this day (above cap. 1.) A j)eople of all nations most
four tliousand years) as a foul brand inconvertible, even to a prophet's pro-
upon Cham in his cursed posterity; verb (Jer. xiii. 23.) ' Can the Ethiopian
for thi; Egyptians and Ethio])ians, or change his skin,' &e. ? A standing
Blackamoors, are the descendants of dreadful monument, and a thundering
cursed Cham (Lexie. Geographic Fer- warning-piece to all such yoinig Chams
rarii, ad vocem jEtliiopiam ; Sam. Bo- as dare to disgrace their parents pri-
cliart, Geogiaphia Sacra, parte i. lib. 4. vately, or rebel against them publicly.
A FUNERAL SERMOX. xlvii
witness Cain find Abel in the Old Testament, and the Pub- Ln. 18.
lican and the Pliarisee in the New. For tlie trnc rcHgion is t^^-J
cliiefly inwai'd for the substance, and not oidy outward for
the circumstance and ceremony; the rehgion of too many,
I had almost said of most formal professors now a days ; an
artificial religion, as being moved cliiefly, if not only, by out-
ward respects and oljjects, without any inward life ; the want
of which did make a wide difference betwixt Cain, and Abel,
the speaker here. From Avliom to pass unto his speech, we
shall interpret it by a threefold exposition.
1. Grammatical.
2. Doctrinal.
3. Moral.
11. As to the grammatical exposition, I am not ignorant
that the word XaXeLrar, in the original, may be verbum medium,
and so may be translated either in the passive sense ' He is
spoken of,' as some few interpreters ^ have rendered it, or in
the active sense, to which I am rather carried bv the clear
and strong current of almost all interpreters, and the harmony
of eight translations'^, both ancient and modern ; Avho all
render it actively, 'he speaketh.' This translation is con-
firmed by a clear parallel (Hcb. xii. 24), where comparison
being made betwixt the precious blood of Jesus Christ and
that of Abel, it is expressed in the active sense XaXovvri;
not in the passive, that ' the blood of sprinkling is better
spoken of,^ but in the active, that ' it speaketh better things
than that of Abel.' Ergo, ' Abel being dead, yet speaketh,'
(juod erat demonstrandum. Enough of the grammatical
exposition.
12. We pass now to the doctrinal exposition. The doc-
trine is this, that for the godly there is a life after this life ;
for 'Abel being dead yet speaketh.' But we know that dead
men are speechless, and that speech is both a sign and an
action of life. Abel is not absolutely dead ; though dead in
part, he still lives. We enlarge the instance from righteous
Abel unto all the faithful ; the total sum is this, that though
B [See Lud. de Dieu Animadv. in Clein. Alex. Chrysost. Vatablus, Ze-
Epistolas, p. 321. edit. 164(i.] gerus, Grotius, Tena. [See Estius in
'■ Syriac, Vulgar, Ethiopic, Arabic, Epistolas, ad loc. et Calovius, Bibl.
Frencii, English, German, Italian; lUustr. N. T., tom. ii. p. 13.52.]
Xlviii THE DEAD MAN's REAL SPEECH.
good men die, yet their good deeds die not ; but they survive,
and that in both worlds.
Prov. 31. Fii'st, in this worhl, to their due praise, for 'their own good
31
works praise them in the gates. ^
Secondly, they live in the next world by their rcAvard and
Rev. 14. coronation, for their 'works do follow them/ So many good
^^' Avorks, so many living tongues of good men after death;
Lu.20.36. who are therefore styled in the Holy Gospel 'the children of
the resurrection.^ And again, Abel still lives unto men in
the memory of all good men, for to such the memory of the
Prov. 10.7. just shall be blessed, and the memory of their virtues calls
for both our commemoration and imitation of them ; which
leads me to the third point propounded, Avhich Avas the moral
exposition.
13. For I suppose none that hear this are so gross of
understanding as to imagine a vocal speech of the dead,
which would be a miracle ; but a speech analogical, by such
Ps. 19. 1. a figure as the heavens speak when they declare the glory of
God. The parallel of St. Chrysostom upon the speech of
Abel, our speaker in the text, the Father after his Avonted
rhetoric amplifies it thus ; ' If Abel had a thousand voices
when he was alive, he hath many more noAv he is dead,^
speaking to our admiration and imitation. But though the
dead man's speech be no A^oeal speech, yet it is and Avill be a
real speech for our conversion or condemnation to the end of
the world ; for Abel being dead, yet speaketh.
First, he speaketh by his repentance implied in his sacri-
fice, not only for homage due by all rational creatures,
whether Angels or men, unto God their creator ; but also as
a tacit confession of sin to be expiated by the all-sufficient
sacrifice of the promised Blessed Seed, the Messiah to
come. And so Abel ' being dead, yet speaketh,' and Avas
by his typical sacrifice the first prophet of the Old Testa-
ment. The good examples of holy men are standing real
sermons ; for there are two ways of preaching ; by word,
or deed. The first is good, the latter is better ; but both
are best. '
Secondly, Abel 'being dead yet speaketh' by his faith
expressed here in the text ; which faith is a ncA'er-dying
preacher to all ages of the Chvu'ch, because it assureth all
A FUNERAL SERMON. xlix
the faitliful, such as was Abel, of both God's regard, and
reward of all His true servants who follow Abel's faith. lid). ii.G.
Thirdly, Abel ' beinp; dead yet speaketh' by his works of Jiis.2. 18.
righteousness, the necessary and best evidences of a Mvely
faith, for which Abel stands canonized by God's own appro- lleb. ii.i.
bation and acceptance. First, of his person, that he was
righteous ; and then of his performance, his sacrifice. There-
fore Abel is enrolled with Enoch, (verse 5,) for his communion
of faith, godliness, and happiness ; by which both Enoch and
Abel pleased God. The Jewish Rabbins' and sundry Chris-
tian interpreters offer as a tradition this sign of God's
acceptance of the sacrifice of Abel, to wit, by sending fire
from heaven, (as upon Aaron's, and upon Solomon's, and Lev. 9. 24.
upon Elijah's sacrifice,) which kindled the sacrifice of Abel 2Cliroii.
the younger brother, and not that of Cain who was the elder j Kings
brother. Some interpreters^ think that this acceptation of ^^- ''^^■
Abel's sacrifice was a designation of Abel, the younger
brother, to the priesthood before Cain, the elder brother;
and that these were the occasion of Cain's envy, and his
envy the cause of Abel's murder. By the way it is worthy
GUI' observation that all that come to worship God are either
Abels or Cains ; that is, they come with faith, or without
faith, and they speed accordingly.
Fourthly and lasth^, Abel * being dead yet speaketh ;' as
in his life by his actions, so at his death by his patience and
passion ; for as St. Stephen was the proto-martyr of the New
Testament, so was Abel the proto-martyr of the Old Testa-
ment; for he died for righteousness' sake. Hence some
interpreters derive his name from "pnx, which in the holy
tongue signifies ' to mourn ;' because he was the first man
that did taste of death, for which and for whom his (and our
first) parents, Adam and Eve, did begin to mourn.
As it is certain that sin (though but a beast) hath a voice,
and (which is more strange in a beast) sin hath an articulate
voice, and by a counter-passion, which is lex taJionis, sin doth
not only indite the sinner, but also indorseth upon the
sinner's bill the parallel punishment for time or place, person
or action, so that many times the punishment becomes the
anagram of the sin. This even natural men do confess,
' Theodot. TheophyL, et alii. '' Cornel. [4 Lapide in loc] Bertram.
1 THE DEAD MAn's REAL SPEECH.
/ Jucig. 1.7. witness Aclonibezeck, 'As I have done, so God hath requited
2 Sain. 12. me/ Which was also king DamFs case, blood for blood;
such Avas the voice of sin and of their own consciences. Sin
hath a voice indeed, and that a loud voice, for it reacheth as
high as heavcu to God's ear, and from thence rebounds with
Gen. 18. an echo upon a man's own conscience. We read of the cry
■ of Sodom, and of the cry of the hireling's wages, kept from
him ; and here Abel's blood hath a voice that cries aloud for
justice in God's earsj and as it were, prefers a bill of indict-
ment. Upon which God, the just judge, immediately
arraign eth Cain, passeth judgment, and doth execution upon
Cain the fratricide ; stamping a curse both upon his person
Gen. 4. 1 0. and estate, saying ' What hast thou done ? the voice of thy
brother's blood cries unto INIe from the ground, and now art
thou cursed from the earth which hath opened her mouth to
receive thy brother's blood from thine hand. When thou
tillest the ground it shall not henceforth yield unto thee her
strength. A fugitive and a vagabond shalt thou be in the
earth.'
Now as sin hath a voice, so grace hath a voice also, calHng
upon us, as for our imitation of the \drtues of the saints
departed, so calling upon God for a gracious compensation of
Rev. 1 i. their works Avhich follow them after death, not at all by way
of merit, but of God's free mercy ; for Avhat proportion be-
twixt man's works, which are but temporary and therefore
linite, (all our best Avorks are no more, and besides imperfect
Rom.8.18. all,) and God's high reward, which is infinite both for weight
and for duration to all eternity ?
Some interpreters add a fifth Avay, by which Abel ' being
dead yet speaketh ;' to Avit, as a type ; by his blood shed by
Cain his brother prefiguring the blood of Christ shed by His
brethren the Jews.
And thus many ways Abel ' being dead yet speaketh ;' and
so all good men, though dead, speak by their good Avorks of
faith and patience. In which blessed number, this dead man
before our eyes Avas through God's grace listed, and so
speaketh by his good deeds to his generation, and seems by
his example to preach unto us all St. Paul's apostolical admo-
Cal. C. y. nition, not to bo Aveary of Avell-doing, for in due season avc
shall reap (a reward) if wc faint not : as our Christiau hope
A rUNEllAL SEllMOX. K
is, the deceased Prelate findeth it now, to liis everlasting
comfort.
O liow gladly would I make an end here, and so come
down ! Sorry 1 am that I must noAV pass and descend from
the literal text to this our real text lying before us. But it
is a rule of Christian practice, that when God hath l)een
pleased to reveal His Avill by the event, our humble resigna-
tion of ourselves and friends and all, with submission of our
will to God^s will, is our duty, and the best remedy to allay
all our sorrows, and to say in the words and with the spirit
of holy Job, 'The Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken job 1.21.
away, blessed be the name of the Lord,^ which is part of our
office for burial. In all this Job sinned not, no more should
we if we Avould be followers of Job's faith and patience ;
which God grant us all, through Jesus Christ our Lord ; to
Whom, with the Father and the Holy Ghost, be ascribed
from Angels, from us, and from all men, praise, power,
majesty and dominion, now and for ever. Amen.
CONTENTS.
SERMON I.
(Page 1.)
Preached at St. Edward's in Cambridge, January the sixth, A.D. mdcxxi. ; and
at Coton, on the Second Sunday after Epiphany.
St. Matthew ii. 1, 2.
Now when Jesus ivas born in Bethlehem of Judea, in the days
of Herod the king, Behold, there came Wise Men from the
East to Jerusalem,
Saying, Where is He That is born King of the Jews ? for we
have seen His star in the east, and are come to worship
Him.
SERMON II.
(Page 24.)
A FUNERAL SERMON.
Preached at St. Martin's in the Fields, on the seventeenth of June, A.D. mdcxxiii.
at the funeral of Mrs. Dorothy Holmes, sister to the Right Reverend Father in
God, the Lord Bishop of Durham.
2 Corinthians v. 1, 2.
For we know that if our earthly house of this tabernacle be dis-
solved, ive have a building of God, an house not made with
hands, but eternal in the heavens.
For which ive sigh and groan.
SERMON III.
(Page 44.)
Preached at Datchet, near Windsor, on the Second Sunday after Epiphany, A.D.
MDCXXiv., at the marriage of Mr. Ahraham De Laune, and Mrs. Mary
Wheeler.
St. John ii. 1, 2.
And the third day there was a marriage in Cana of Galilee,
and the Mother of Jesus was there.
And Jesus ivas also called, and His Disciples, unto the
marriage.
e
liv CONTENTS.
SERMON IV.
(Page 58.)
Preached probably in 162,').
St. Matthew iv. G.
If TJiou be the Son of God, cast Thyself doivn headloni/, for it is
tvritten, He shall give His Angels charge over Thee, and with
their hands they shall bear Thee up, lest at any time Thou
dash Thy foot against a stone.
SER^ION V.
iPage 71.)
Preached probably ii» 1625.
St. Matthew iv. 6.
For it is ivritten, He shall give His Angels charge over Thee,
and ivith their hands they shall bear Thee up, lest at any
time Thou dash Thy foot against a stone.
SERMON VI.
(Page 8j.)
Preached on the First Sunday in Advent, December 3, 1()2(), at the Consecration
of the Bishop of Carlisle in Durham House Chapel, in London.
St. John xx. 21, 22.
Peace be unto you. As My Father sent Me, even so
send I you.
And when He had spoken these words, He breathed on them and
said. Receive the Holy Ghost ;
WTiose sins you do remit they are remitted, ^c.
SERMON VII.
(Page 10f>.)
Preached at Brancepath on the Fifth Sunday after Trinity, June 27, 1630.
Psalm cxxii. 6, 7.
Pray for the peace of Jerusalem, they shall prosper that love
thee.
Peace be ivithin thy walls and plenteousness within thy
palaces.
SERMON VIII.
(Page Uj.)
Preached at Durham, on the Feast of Pentecost, :May 20, 1632.
Romans \\\\. 14.
Quicunque Spiritu Dei aguntur, ii sunt filii Dei.
For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, those are the sons
of God.
CONTENTS. IV
SERMON IX.
(Page 131.)
Preached at Brancepalli, July fs, IG32.
Exodus xx. 3.
Non habebis deos alienos coram Me.
Thou shall have no other gods before My face, oi', no other yods
but Me.
SERMON X.
(Page 143.)
Preached at Brancepath in 16S2.
Exodus xx. 3.
Non habebis deos alienos coram Me.
Thou shall have no other gods but Me.
SERMON XI.
(Page 15.3.)
Preached at Brancepath in 1633.
Exodus xx. 8.
Memento, ut diem Sabbalhi sanclifices, ^'C.
Remember that thou keep holy the Sabbath day, six days shall
thou labour, ^c.
SERMON XII.
(Page 166.)
Preached at Brancepatli in 1(533.
Exodus xx. 9, 10.
Sex dies operabis el fades omnia opera tua.
Septimo autem die Sabbatum Domini Dei tui est ; non fades
omne opus in eo.
Six days shall thou labour and do all that thou hast to do.
But the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God; in it
thou shall do no manner of ivork.
Ivi CONTENTS.
SERMON XIII.
(Page 177.)
Preached at Braiicepath in 1633.
Exodus xx. 10.
But the seventh clay is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God ; in it
thou shalt do no manner of work, thou and thy son and thy
daughter, thy man-servant and thy maid-servant, thy cattle
and the stranger that is within thy gates, 8fC.
SERMON XIV.
(Page 190.)
Preached at Paris, September 11, 1650.
Psalm cxxix. 5.
Confundantur omnes qui oderunt Sion.
Let them be confounded, as many as have evil wilt at Sion.
SERMON XY.
(Page 206.)
Preached at Paris, on Sexagesima Sunday, Feb. 12, 16;) 1.
Genesis iii. 13.
Et dixit Dominus Deus ad mulierem, ^c.
And the Lord God said unto the woman, Wliat is this that
thou hast done ? And the woman said. The serpent beguiled
me, [and I did eat.^
SERMON XVI.
(Page 220.)
Preached at Paris, March 5, 1651.
Genesis iii. 13, 14.
And the Lord God said unto the woman, What is this that
thou hast done ? And the woman said, The serpent beguiled
me and I did eat.
And the Lord God said unto the serpent, Because thou hast
done this, thou art cursed, &^-c.
CONTENTS. Ivii
SERMON XYII.
(Page 236.)
Preached at Paris, on the Fifth Sunday in Lent, March 2(3, 1651.
Genesis iii. 13.
And the ivoman said, The serpent beguiled me.
SERMON XVIII.
(Page 248.)
Preached at Paris, on the Octave of the Festival of the Resurrection.
April 16, 1651.
St. John xx. 9.
Nondum enim sciebant Scripturas, ^c.
For as yet they knew not the Scriptures, that He must rise
from the dead.
SERMON XIX.
(Page 263.)
Preached at Paris, on the Sunday after the Festival of the Ascension,
May 21, 1651.
AcTsi. 9, 10, 11.
Et hcEC locutus, videntibus iisdem, in altum sublatus est, ^c.
Et ecce I duo viri astiterunt ilUs in vestibus albis.
And when He had spoken these things, ivhile they beheld, He
was taken up ; and a cloud received Him out of their sight.
And ivhile they looked steadfastly toivard heaven as He went
up, behold tivo men stood by them in white apparel.
Which also said. Ye men of Galilee, lohy stand ye looking up
into heaven ? This same Jesus, Tllio is taken up from you
into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen
Him go into heaven.
SERMON XX.
(Page 276.)
Preached at Paris, on the Festival of our Saviour's Nativity, 1651.
St. John i. 9, 10.
Erat Ille lux ilia, et vera ilia lux, ^c.
He was that light, or, Thai light was the time light, which
lighteth every man that cometh into the ivorld, and He ivas
in the world.
Iviii CONTEXTS.
SERMON XXI.
(Page 291.)
Preached at Paris, on the Second Sunday after the Nativity of our Lord,
January 5, 1653.
St. Matthew ii. [1. and] 2.
Venerunt magi .... dicentes, .... Vidimus eniin stellam
Ejus in orient e.
There came ivise men .... and said, .... For we have seen
His star in the east.
SERMON XXII.
(Page 306.)
I'reached at Paris, on the Festival of the Nativity of Christ 1665.
1 Timothy iii. 16.
Magnum est pietatis mysteriwn, Deus manifestatus in came.
Qreat is the mystery of godliness, God manifest in the flesh.
APPENDIX I.
(Page 325.)
Preached at Durham House, on tlie eve of the Epiphany, Sunday the 5th of
January, 1622-[23 ]
St. Matthew ii. 1, 2.
Now when Jesus ivas born in Beth/em of Judea, in the days of
Herod the king, Behold there came wise men from the east to
Jerusalem,
Saying, Where is He That is born king of the Jeivs ? for we
have seen His star in the east, and are come to worship
Him.
CONTENTS. li\
APPENDIX ir.
(Page 331.)
FRAGMENT OF A FUNERAL SERMON.
APPENDIX III.
(Page 337.)
Preached at Brancepatli, on the Second Snnd:;y al'ter Trinity.
St. Luke xiv. 16—20.
A certain man made a great supper, and bade many ;
And sent his servant at supper time to say to them that rvere
bidden, Come ; for all things are now ready.
But they all at once began to make excuse. The first said, I
have bought a farm, and I must needs go see it ; I j^ray thee
have me excused.
Another said, I have bought five yoke of oxen, and I go to prove
them ; I pray thee have me excused.
And another said, I have married a ivife, and therefore I cannot
come, &)C.
APPENDIX IV.
(Page 339.)
Psalm cxxii. 6.
Rogate pacem . . .
Pray for the peace of Jerusalem, they shall prosper that love if.
APPENDIX V.
(Page 343.)
St. Matthew xiii. 27, 28.
So the servants of the householder came and said unto him, Sir,
didst not thou sow good seed in thy field ? From whence
then hath it those tares ?
He saith unto them. The envious man hath done this.
Ix CONTENTS.
APPENDIX YI.
(Page 348.)
Preached at Paris, the Gospel for the Fifth Sunday after the Epipliany, 1G5I.
St. Matthew xiii. 24.
Simile est regnuni cceloi'um homini seminanti in agro, &^-c.
The kingdom of heaven is like unto a man that solved good seed
in his field :
But while men slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among
the wheat, and went his way.
But ivhen the blade ivas sprung up, and had brought forth fruit,
then appeared the tares also.
So the servants of the householder came and said unto him. Sir,
didst not thou sow good seed in thy field ? from whence then
hath it tares ?
He said unto them, The enemy hath done this. The servants
said unto him, Wilt thou then that we go and weed them
up ?
But he said, Nay ; lest ivhile ye gather up the tares, ye root up
also the ivheat ivith them.
Let both grow together till the harvest .- and in the time of
harvest I ivill say to the reapers, Gather ye first the tares,
and bind them together in bundles to be burnt ; but gather
the wheat into my barn.
APPENDIX VII.
(Page 351.)
Preached at Paris, on the First Sunday after Trinity, June II, 16.51.
St. Matthew xiii. 24, 25.
Simile est regnum ccelorum homini seminanti in agro, 6fC.
The kingdom of heaven is like unto a man that sowed good seed
in his field.
But while men slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among the
wheat, and went his way.
I
SERMON P.
PRFACIIED AT ST. EDWARd's IN' CAMBRIDGE, JANUARY THE SIXTH, A.D.
MDCXXI,, AXD AT COTON, ON THE SECOND SLNDAV AFTER EPIPHANY.
St. Matthew ii. 1^ 2.
Now when Jesus iva.s born in Bethlehem of Judea in the days of
Herod the king, Behold, there came Wise Men from the East
to Jerusalem,
Saying, WJiere is He TJiat is born King of the Jetvs ? for lue
have seen His star in, the East, and are come to worship
Him.
I CHOSE my text for the time, the celebration of this day,
that we may keep Solomon's j'ule, verbum diei in die suo ; Prov. 15.
and therefore before I come to the text I will say a little of '^^'
the day, this Epiphany, this manifestation of our Lord and
Savioiu'.
We are still at the feast of Christmas, and this is the last
and great day of the feast, as St. John said of another. A Joh- 7. 37.
feast of joy it has been all this while, but this day was given
us that our joy might be full''. They were tidings of joy
that the Angels brought, a while since, to the shepherds,
Jews, hard at hand ; but when the glad tidings of the Gospel
came abroad once to all the people, as this day they came so,
then were they no more tidings of ordinary, but of great joy.
'Behold, I bring you tidings/ saith the Angel, but not
to you alone ; though to you, yet to others as well as you,
' which shall be to all people.' Hitherto, then, it was Evan- Lu. 2. 10.
gelizo vobis, vobis Judceis, but to-day it was 07nni populo ;
that now a Saviour Avas born unto us all, "Which was Christ
the Lord. And indeed this is om* Christmas-dav, that were
" See Appendix No. 1. "Of the High and Great Feast of
'^ See Bishop Overall's Annotations Christ's Epiphany."
COSIN. n
2 Various Ep'qjJianies of our Saviour.
S E R M. Gentiles ; for though Christ was horn twelve days since in
^ JulT^ yet He came not ahroad the Avorld while'- now, and to
2 liiuif"^ ^^s IIg seemed as yet unhorn (heing hut like a rich treasure
in a man's field, at this time not known to be so,) till lie was
this day manifested unto us in the persons of these "Wise
Men, the first fruits of the Gentiles''.
There were many Epiphanies before this, for it was made
manifest many times before. To the Blessed Virgin first,
for she knew it nine months before, and then to John Bap-
tist, before he was born himself, for he could seem in the
Lu. 1.41. womb to point at Him, v.heii His mother came, Ecce Agnus
Joh. 1.29. j)gi^ Qui toUit peccata mimdi. And after He was born, the
shepherds had tidings of the Lamb of God too. But all
these were the Epiphanies of some few persons only, and the
new Morning Star was seen but a little way, as far as Mary's
Ps. 97. 4. family, or a field hard by, and no fm'ther. Now to-day His
Bo^k''^ • lig'itiiings gave shine unto the world, and at His Epiphany
sion. not a few persons at home, or near at hand, but the nations
abroad, even at the ends of the earth, had news brought them
of it from heaven ; and now this day not Jury only, (that was
Vs. 8. 1. too straight for Him who must have the heathen given Him
for His inheritance,) but the whole world was the better for
Christ's nati^^ty. A true Christmas-day this, and Christmas
rejoicing right, when all fare the better for it. Before, the
heathen were about the hedges, shut quite out of doors; but
to-day the gates were set open for them, as avcII as for the
Jews. "Which community was well figured, as the common'*
note is, in the place that Christ would have His nativity
happen in, even in a common inn, where every one might
come, the Gentile as welcome as the Jew ; and because perhaps
they would not be together in one chamber, (for we read that
Joh. 4. 9. the Jews meddle not with the Samaritans, nor keep their
company,) therefore Christ would be born in the stable, where
there is no distinction made, but all put together in one
room. Or if an inn be not large enough, there is another
figm'c will hold all the world, and that is the time of taxing
•^ Illi m.io-i, quidnam fiicrunt nisi cationis gentium rationabili gaudio ce-
primitiffi gentium. S. August. Sevm. 4. lebrcmus. S. Leo, Bibl. Pair. v. ii. 814.
de Epiplian. Opp. v. 037. His divinse <* See Suarez in 3 part. S. Thomae,
gratiac mysteriis cruditi, diem piimi- q. xxxv. art. 7 and 8. sec. iii. § ' Se-
tiarum nostrarum et inclioationcm vo- cnndo dicitur.'
Reasons for rejoicing at this time. 3
the whole earth, as St. Luke says, just at tliis time, whcreiu Ln. 2. i.
Christ wouhl be born, to tell us that He came to l)o the
Saviour of the whole eartli. For though it was l)ut iu a little
town, saitli St. Leo*", yet the great Avorld fared the better for
His nativit}^; nay, it is but a small thing, saith God Himself,
in Isaiah, to raise the tribes of Jacob, or to restore the deeays
of Israel, I will give Thee a light to the Gentiles, and a salva- Isa. in. fi.
tion unto the end of the world. There He promised it, and
this day He was as good as His Avord, for now, even this day,
our eyes have seen His salvation, Avhich He hath prepared,
not for Jacob or Israel only, l)ut before the face of all pcoi)le,
and to be a light to lighten the Gentiles, as well as to be the Lu. 2. 30.
glory of His people Israel. And we have heard with our
ears, O God, and our fathers have told us of old, how Thou rs.ii.],2.
hast not driven out the heathen, as David there speaks, but
planted them in, fetched them home that were gone astray
before, fetch [ed] them to Thy blessed flock, that we might be Joii. io.kj.
all one fold under that great Shepherd, That Avould give Ilis
life for His flock.
This then is the day Avhich the Lord hath made, made it
and made us Math it too ; indeed He had made us before,
but we had marred His workmanship ; now to-day we came
to be made again, and our second making made us for ever,
we were now become His workmanship in Christ Jesus, asEph. 2. lo.
St. Paul calls it. This is the day that the Lord hath made
for us, and therefore this should be the day that we should
make for Him too; rejoice and be glad in it, as it follows Ps. 118.24.
there in the Psalm, and as it follows here in the Gospel too ;
for St. jNIatthew says, a little after the text, that when they saw
the star they rejoiced exceedingly, and so they proved the Mat. 2. lo.
Angel's words true, tidings of great joy. And now I know Lu. 2. lo.
there is no question but that most of us will rejoice too ; nay,
the world shall knoAV that Ave do not mean to pass this day
aAvay without that. But such joy we commonly use as, God
knoAvs, will end Avith weeping and gnashing of teeth : our
mouth shall be filled Avith laughter, if ye Avill, and we will Ps. 126.
be like them that dream, as the Prophet speaks, but not for ' "
the turning of our captivity this day from bondage, a Avorse
' S. Leo, Semi, in Nativ. ap. Eibl. Patr. v. ii. 81.7.
B 2
4 Di(jiiihj of tills festival.
S E R :sr. than that in Babvluii, froiu the boiidasrc of sin and liell
'- — itself. ' Sing avc merrily unto God our strength/ saith the
Ps. SI. ]. Psalm. No, ' Sing merrily/ an ye -oill, so far we go ; but if
we come to ' God oiu' strength/ then our voice is quite gone,
we have no skill in such songs, and yet this must be our
rejoicing, or else all our Christmas sport is but spoiled. It
is true these are all days of joy indeed, of great joy; joy
Is. 9. 3. as much as ye will, even as they joy in harvest, saith Isaiah ;
but be sure ve take that along to make vour iov sweet which
the Holy Virgin taught us at the very first news of all, of any
Im. 1. 4(5. Christmas rewards, at the Annunciation, " My soul doth
magnify the Lord, and my spirit hath rejoiced in God my
Saviour.^^
And this dav became God the Saviour of tlie Gentiles,
when we might see the star tell us, as Christ afterward told
Lu. 19. 9. the publican, this day was salvation come unto us; even this
last day of all the solemnity it came, to make it greater than
the rest, the greatest of all the twelve, as the Catholic Church
hath ever accounted it, the great and proper feast of the
Gentiles, such as we were before it, and the last day was
always the greatest day of the feast, as you may see in the
Joh. 7. 37. Gosi^el. So I did not amiss to call this day at first, the great
and last day of our Christmas solemnity. Last. 1^11 war-
rant you every tradesman will tell you (specially if he has got
a twang in his head) that all these observations of times are
but popish customs, they will not celebrate ye a day longer ;
nay, not so long neither, but for the law; the day of the
Gentiles' calling, what is that to them ? They have a tribe
and a calling bv themselves, that was marked out for heaven
sure long before either Jews or Gentiles were stirring. And
' great' too, for the great and wide world Avas blessed this
Lu. 1. 78; dav with tlie day-star from on high, with the e-lad tidings of
' ' " the Gospel, the tidings of the great Shepherd and the great
King, the great King above all gods. Or because we wiU be
sure to make it a great and high day, higher than the rest ;
if this Epiphany alone will not do it, we have two or three
more actions, of that dignity that they would make high
days of themselves, to add to it ; for this day, saith St. Gre-
gory Kazianzen'", was Christ also baptized in Jordan, and
' S. Greg. Nazianz. Oiat. xxxi.x. in saiicta luniina, Opp. 1. (324.
Christ's several Epiphanies. 5
therefore he calls his oration, De haptisrao Christi — Epiphania
Domini^. Before, Pie was born to lis upon this day, and now
He is baptized for us upon the same da}' too. And because
it should want no honour, we read that a year after His bap-
tism He wrought His first miracle at a marriage upon this
day too, saith Maximus; or, an ye will not believe him, the
Second Lesson [apjjointed by] our own Church will tell you Joli. 2. 1—
as much. They are three oidy things Avhich the Church hath ~'
ever observed for to ju'cserve the honour of the day : and if
you will have a fourth to make more exceeding this day than
any other we read of, this was the day saith Origen, and St. Au-
gustine after him, wherein He fed four thousand in the wilder-
ness with a few loaves and two fishes. Ecce, quam magna et >fat. u.
mirabilia fecit. Behold now, Miow many and how wonderful
things He hath done for us to-day,' made us, baptized us,
married us, fed us, all in this one day. And therefore among
the ancients (as St. Hierome for one in Avhom I have read it,
but INIaximus saith he hath seen it in many more) it is not
dies EpiphanicF, in the singular number, but Epiphaniarum,
a day of many manifestations''.
And well may it be called thus, a day of many Epiphanies,
were it but for the Gentiles' coming only ; for if ever many
things were opened at once that Avere hid before, shadoAvs of
things to come, it Avas surely this day. For though there
was no such matter thought on before, yet now it is made
manifest what Avas figured by these same EoCpIoratores, the J oah. 6.2?.
spies that went out beforehand to see the Land of Promise.
And noAV ye may perceive plainly what it Avas that Solomon's 1 Kings 5.
Temple must have the Avood from Lebanon amongst the ]'ch.-29.2.
• s See the passages collected by Ca- festo Epiphanias Domini, Serni. 1.
saubou in his ii Exercit. ad Ann. Card. ' Hodie illud festnm [«/. sacranientuni]
Baron, pp. 1(J8, 169. edit. Gencv. 1(555. colimus, quo se in honiine Deus virtu-
and by Suicer, in his Thesaur. v. 'Em- tibus declaravit ; pro eo quod in hac die,
(pdveia. give qiiod in coelo Stella ortus sui iiun-
'' Latini scriptores causas hujus so- tium praebuit ; sive quod in Cana Gali-
leiniiitatis tres assignarunt, niagoruni laeas in convivio nuptial! aquam in vi-
adventum.baptisma Christi, etprinuini num convertit ; sive quod in Jordanis
in Cana niiraculuni ; quae tria miracula undis aquas ad reparationem liuuiani
eadcm die sed annis diversis piitabant generis suo baptismo consecravit ; sive
esse facta, utprolixeexplicantEucherius quod dc quinque panibus quinque uiil-
Lugdnnensis, Homilia in VigiliaS. An- Ha hominum satiavit. In qaolibet lio-
drepe, et Petrus Chrysologus, Serm.l 5 7. rum saluiis nostra; mysteria continentur
. . . Sunt et qui rationem quartam afte- et gaudia. Casaul). Exercit. Baron,
rant, propter nriraculum quinque pa- p. 16!).
num. B. Augustinus de Tempore, in
s E R M. Gentiles^ as well as stones at liorac among tlie Jews ; and that
Types of the Epiphany.
stones at liorac among
Hiram king of Tyrns must help to build God's house as well
5. 17." as himself, king of Jerusalem, and afterwards have twenty
] ^'"ss cities given him for the Jews and Gentiles to dwell together
in. And noAv it is plain what is meant that not Gideon's
Judge. 6. fleece alone, but the whole earth must be spread over with
37 38 . .
the morning dcAV ; and that Moses had married a woman of
Ex. 2. 21. Ethiopia; and that Samson must leave the daughters of his
Judg.ii.i. brethren, and first marry an uncircumcised Philistine, and
Jiidg.16.4. then fall in love with the harlot Dalilah : which manifests
likewise what we were, for before this day we Avent a whoring
after our own inventions. And therefore it was well figured
again in that, that God would have Hosea go and take unto
Hos. 1. 2. him a wife of fornications ; and that a woman in captiAdty
Esth.2.is. must be married to Assuerus the king; and that Moses
the servant of God must be adopted the son of PharaoVs
Gen. 20.3. daughter; and that Isaac must have the inheritance, though
Ismael were the eldest ; and Jacob have the bu'th-right.
Gen. 2(). tliougli Esau wcrc the first-born (which is St. Paul's ap-
33 • . .
Rom.9.13. plication to the very honour of this day) ; and so that Ephraim
must be put at the right hand of Jacob, though ]\Ianasses
Gen. 48. were the elder son, howsoever it displeased Joseph ; and
1 o
that Joseph himself must be sold for a bond-slave into Egv'pt,
as we were before, and afterwards exalted to the golden chain
Gen. 37. and the best chariot that Pharaoh had, to the height of his
42 43. kingdom, as we are now, for thus were we this day exalted;
and lastly, that his father Jacob must have children by Leah
Gen. 35. that Avas blear-evcd, as Avell as by Rachel, that Avas beautiful
23, 24. , . . ^ -^
and tair.
I hope by this time, it is clear Avhy this day should be
called the Epiphany ; there Avere so many things made
known in it, that lay under a cloud before; for these Avere
all shadows yet. But noAv Avlien this star arose, it enlight-
ened them all, made them manifest what they all figiu'ed,
even this day's calling of the Gentiles. Take but any of
them ; the blear-eyed Leah Avill tell us hoAV blind we were
before, as blind as men that grope in the dark, in the dark-
ness of ignorance, darkness as black as that of Egypt; and
that therefore this star, this day-spring from on high, did
apjicar to-day to give light to them that sit in darkness and
Benefits conferred by if. 7
iu the shadow of death, and to guide our feet into the -way of
peace ; of peace right, for before we were at mighty variance
with heaven. Before, we could hear of notliing but, to exe-
cute vengeance upon the heathen, and to bind their kings in Ps. lit). 7,
chains ; but to-day the heathen are come into God^s inherit- ^'
ance, and without compLiint too ; no more indignation now
to be poured upon them, as it follows there in the Psalm, but
God now rcigncth over the heathen, and the princes of the
people are gathered unto the people of the God of Abraham; Ps.-17.8,9.
and though the Gentiles did rage before, and the kings of
the earth did band themselves against the Lord's Anointed,
yet to-day they gi'ew wise and took David's counsel, 'Be
wise now therefore, O ye kings •' they came and joined them- Ps. 2.2,10.
selves together for a better pui'pose, to worship the Lord's
Anointed, Christ the Lord. Before this time God was knoAvn
in Jury only, and His name was great in Israel alone, but Ps. 7G. 1.
now there is neither speech nor language but His voice hath Ps. 9. 13.
been heard among them ; and since the heavens have de- Ps. 19. 1.
clared His glory, as this day they did. His sound is gone
CA'cn unto the ends of the world, as far as the Magi of Rom. 10.
the East. Yea, though we were dogs before, and must not
have the children's bread given us, as Christ bespake the Mat. 13.
woman, yet now He hath given us power to be the sons of '
God, as St. John speaks. Joh. 1.12.
It was David's prayer that God would think upon HisPs. 74'. 3.
inheritance, and whensoever He thought upon it, to-day we
are sui'C He did, and it was time to think and have mercy
upon her, yea O Lord, the time was come, for it pitied Thee Ps. 102.
to see us in the dust. And therefore as soon as Christ did
but ask of Him, as the Psalmist speaks. He gave Him the Ps. 2. 8.
heathen for His inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the
earth for His possession.
And though we Avere never so far remote, men of the East
and at the ends of the earth, as I tell you, yet God heard our
cry to bring us out of bondage, and to turn om- captirity like ^^- ^-^- ^•
the rivers iu the South. A cruel captirity, as I told you
before, worse by far than that in Babylon or the laud of
Goshen ; yet from this captivity, from this house of bond-
age, hath God this day delivered us. And now we are at
deliverance, will ye mark how like our deliverance to-day
8 Deliverance from Egypt, a type.
S E II M. was to theirs out of Ejrypt in every point. When Israel came
'- out of Egyptj the sea fled so fast that David was fain to ask
Ps. 114. 5. what it ailed : and might not we this day stand wondering,
not at the sea, but at that which governs the sea, the heavens
and the stars, for going backward ? for this star that led these
Wise Men went quite cross to all the other. Then as Pharaoh,
he and all his host were troubled to hear the news of their de-
livery, and raged so much that a man might ask them what
ailed them too, so Herod here (ye may see it in the very next
Mat. 2. 3. words to my text) he no sooner heard of our news, the ncAvs
of Gentiles coming to Christ, but presently he and all Je-
rusalem were troubled at it ; and how he raged, the voice
of weeping and howling that was heard in Kama, and Rachel
that mourned for her childi'en and would not be comforted,
or the men of war, that knew what belonged to raging best,
shall tell us, who went and slew all the poor young children in
Bethlem, where Herod thought to have put out the light that
this day gave shine unto the world ; but he was deceived, it
was too high for his reach. And last of all, as Pharaoh, for
Ex. 14.27. all his raging, was overwhelmed and drowned in the Red Sea,
so Herod here, howsoever he lived a while longer, yet he
drowned himself, while he lived, in the Red Sea too, even the
sea of blood.
So then, for a conclusion, as God hath made this our day's
deliverance like theirs, as we see in all points, what have we
to do but to make the day, as they made it too, a day of joy
and thanksgiving, a day of a solemn and set service. Moses
Ex. 15.20. with a song and Miriam with a timbrel in her hands that
day. Woe to us if we had been still constrained to dwell in
Ps. 120. 5. ^lesech, or to have had our habitation among the tents of
Kedar ; then Ave might indeed have sat like unto them that
Ps. 137. 2. mourn and have hanged our harps upon the willows. But
since we are brought out of darkness, and now sit no more in
Lu. 1. 79. the shadow of death, but have our feet guided by the light of
His star, our hearts made glad with the tidings of the Gospel,
now bring hither the tabret and harp, and blow up the
Ps. 81. 2. trumpet of praise, for this is our solemn feast day.
And so I have done M'itli the feast, and from the dav I come
to opus cliei, from the time to the text, though I have not
been far from it all this while.
The subject divided. 9
' Now when Jesus was born in Betlilcm/ And now when
I begin to read my text, metliinks it is not ojms diet, it doth
not agree with the time, for Christ was not born in ]5cthlem
to-day, and indeed unless Ave go on it will not be verbiim in
die suo, Solomon's rule. And therefore to make it so, it
follows, ' Behold "Wise INIcn came from the East to Jerusalem,
saying, Where is lie That is born King of the Jews, for wc.
have seen,' &c.
The text would do well to have no division to-day, because
it is a day of union, wherein they that were divided before
were made one under Christ ; and therefore I might only
call it the Epiphany, one general head, and so away. But
because we have been long enough about that, and for
order's sake too, you may observe these parts.
1. A peregrination, 'Behold there came from the East to
Jerusalem / the first point,
2. ' There came' — not poor pilgrims or beggars that had
nothing else to do, but — the great ones, the sages of the land,
Ecce, Magi venerunt ; and that is the second point, the per-
sons that came.
3. And they came, not like men that had no comfort or
company in their journey, that they knew not ; but a glad-
some dii-ector they had to go along with them, a star in the
firmament ; and that is the third.
4. Then for the fourth have you the end of their journey ;
the kings of the East came just as the queen of the South i Kings
did, to see the king of the Jews, and therefore they ask,
"WTiere is the King of the Jews ? Yet here they differed ;
for she came to hear and see and they came to worship, and
we are come to worship Him.
5. And the last point of all is, the present occasion of their
coming ; which was Christ's being then newly born at Bethle-
hem— ' When Jesus' &c. — And here the kings' coming
differed from the queen's again, for she came to see Solomon
in his full strength, and these to worship Christ in the be-
ginning of His age ; she to behold him in all his royalty, in
his royal throne, in his kingly city ; these to behold Christ in
all His poverty, His robes being but the poor swaddhng-clouts
that His Mother's mantle could make Him, His attendants
not lords of the chamber but beasts of tlie field, and His
10 Degrees in our Lord's humiliation.
s E R M. throne not of six fair steps,, or a great throne of ivory co-
vered over with gokl, hnt a rude manger covered perhaps
2 Chron.9 ^^
17, 18. with dust, or at the best His Mother's arms. This was the
magnificence that they came to see, and this the King That
they took all this pains to search and come from the East
this day to worship.
1. I will handle the occasion first, because that lays first
in the text, and so I Avill deal with all the rest. When Jesus
was (1) horn at (2) Bethlem, in the (3) days of (4) Herod the
king ; that is the occasion ; and I will not handle it neither,
I will but even touch it and so away ; because, as I said be-
fore, it is not proper to the day. But somewhat we will
make of it though, and because it stands in our way to the
star, we will make a ladder of it, to bring us up thither, and
we will go up apace too, for the time is short, and we have
much to do when we come there.
There be but four steps in it, and the first step hits right ;
for it is fit to be the lowest of all, it is Christ's humility.
Cum natus esset Jesus, Avhen He was born, that Jesus AVho
was the Son of the living God, as St. Mark begins his
Mark 1.1. Gospcl, sliould comc to be the son of Joseph, as St. Matthew
^^' ' ' begins his ; that the immortal God Himself should come to
be a mortal man, the Lord of Life come and subject Himself
to the state of dying men, — this is beyond all degrees of
lowliness. It had been humility enough, sure, had it been
only Cum Jesus esset in Bethlem, and natus left out, to have
been there at all, for the Son of God to have visited the sons
of men in what majesty best befitted Him ; but to be born.
Cum natus esset, that was too much for Him, man that is
rs.i03.ii5, born of a woman, saitli David, is a thing of nought. Nay,
/actus then had been far less, for so He might have had a
perfect body framed Him, and ' made,' in the vigoiu" of His
age, as Adam was, and so have escaped the diseases of child-
hood : but now, not to be ' made,' but to be ' born,' that is
to endure many more miseries, misery within the womb and
misery without it, the age next the birth is full of them.
Yet for all this, Jesus natus est, He did not abhor the Virgin's
womb (a thing we may see by that to be abhorred,) but was
even content to be 'born' for us, as all miserable men are.
This is the first step.
Christ, ivhy born in Bdhlehem. 11
2. But the second step is more lowliness vet, it comes a
degree liiglier ; a strange virtue this humility hath, that the
lower it goes the higher it riseth.
Not ' horn' only, hut ' born in Bethlem ;' the place where
Jesus was horn, in Bethlem. Why, if Jesus, the Son of God,
must needs he horn, a man would think He would have had
a place fit for His birth ; the glorious heaven would not have
been amiss for this purpose, and therefore if Mary had been
assumed into it beforehand, as they say she was afterwards "'j
there to have brought Ilim forth, it had been somewhat like
Himself. Or if not there, because He must have come
down upon the earth howsoever, yet the city of the great
King, the city of David, would have done well ; for we use to
say that the place doth not a little dignify the birth ; and
therefoi-e St. Paul knew how well it would do to say that he
was born at Tarsus, a famous and a noble city in Cilicia. But Acts 21.
now in little Bethlem, one of the out and despised cities, was '
Christ content to be born in ; and there, not in a palace, or
any house of His own, or His Mother's either, but in an inn
among the common people. In an inn? No, I was mis-
taken, there was no room for Him there, it was in the stable
among the common beasts, and no soft couch spread for Him
there neither. It was even in a cold hard cratch', in a very ' a manger
corner of the stable too. A man was he ? a very worm, and
no man ; the scorn and the outcast of the people. Look ye, Ps. 22. 6.
here is a ladder alone. Not in the glorious city of heaven,
nor in any glorious city of earth neither, nor in any glorious
house of any city ; but in a mean city, and in a mean house
too, and not by any right of His own in a mean house, but
in a common inn, where every body had to do as Avell as He ;
and not in any chamber there, as the meanest comer Avould
take up, that, but in the stable ; and not in any large or se-
questered room neither, but in a corner of the cratch. So
far as He could go, fio further, nor I neither ; but this w^as
strange ; Him whom the heaven of heavens could not con-
tain before, to be thus pent up : this was humility, lowliness
to the height.
And now we are come to the top of the ladder. For besides
'' See Suarez in 3 Thoma?, torn. ii. p. 198.
12 Christ, ivhy horn in the reign of Herod.
SERM. His immortality and immcnsitv, Avliicli ye see tlicse two,
'■ ' born/ and ' born at Bctlilcm/ haye bumbled Mell enough,
He bad otbcr attributes to be brought low too ; His eternity
first, and then His power.
3. So we make the third step to be ' in the days •' when
Jesus was born at Bethlem in the daj's. That He That
was without beginning or ending, Which made the evening
and the morning to be the first day for us. Which was the
ancient of days Himself, that He should be born in diebus,
' in the days,' this must needs be one degree more. It was
enough, one might suppose, that place must measure Him
before, the stable in Bethlem ; but to have time measure
Him too, to be made a man of thirty-three j^ears of age, that
Ps. 22. G. is to be more vile yet, as David said. And because we are at
the time, we will see what time He was born too ; for though
it was in the days of Herod, yet it was in the night time, and
in the winter time besides. For the winter, our yearly ob-
servation of the feast will tell us it was so; and for the night,
Lu. 2. 8. St. Luke saith, it was when the shepherds were keeping
their flocks by night, as you may read in his Gospel. Now
the day time might have afforded some comfort, or the
summer time at least might have helped the nakedness of
His tender body ; but in a cold, winter night to be born,
there His charity was hot, that was fervent love indeed.
4. But it is not in diebus only, but in diebus Herodis, in
the days of Ilcrod the king, and that is a degree further, the
fourth step ; to have His power made subject to a tyrant.
He That was the head of all, it was strange to have Him live
under any power, or if iinder any, yet not under a wicked
and a cruel tyrant. If He must needs have a king over
Him, it would have been good to have had such a one as
Gen. 41. Pliaraoli Avas to Joseph, or Assuerus to Esther, or iTarius to
£g'f 2 1" Daniel; but to have another Pharaoh arise, that knew Him
Dan. (). 1. not, and in his time to be born, and to have a Herod that
' would make a howling over all Rama but he would kill Him,
and then to come, this w^as more strange than all the rest.
And yet, now I think of it, in diebus Herodis w^as a very fit
time for Him, it was time He should come, for the sceptre
was gone from Judah and Christ must come to the Jews.
As long as it tarried there, (Jod's prophets were rnongh to be
Chrisl's humiUatlon our exaltation. 13
sent ; but wlieu it came under strangers once,, and under
Herod, a cruel and wicked king, when tlie law of God was
held in unrighteousness, then it was a just time for the Just
One, the Son of God, to come ; none could recover the king-
dom but He, and lie went a strange way about it ; if He
had not told us that His kingdom was not of this world,
we might have wondered at it, and so we do still, to go no
further than the text ; for who would have been born in Jury
at such a time as he must presently run into Egj'pt before
he could go alone. This was to add misery upon misery,
one degree upon another, till He came to the highest pitch
of humility. Count we : immortality itself made a mortal
V ' «/
man, natus, the first step; immortality confined within a
cratch, natus in Bethlem, the second ; eternity measured by
time, in diebus, the thii-dj power made subject to tyranny,
in diebus Herodis regis, the foui'th. By this time Ave are
come to the very top of the ladder.
AVhcre we may stand and see, not the Angels descending. Gen. 28.
as Jacob did, but the Son of God Himself descending from ""
the bosom of His Father to the womb of His ]Mother, from
heaven to earth, and this was the ladder He made for us to
go up to heaven by; for imless He had come down, we should
never have gone up. Whether lie came with all His lowli-
ness but to lead us up again, and to tell us that here was
notliing to be looked for, here below ; for if there had, the
Wise Men to-day lost then* labour in seeking Him out for
a king. And therefore He lifts up then* eyes to heaven, to
the bright star there ; which, for all His lowliness here, gave
them to understand that He had a kingdom in a better
world. And thus we see how this ladder hath brought us
from earth to heaven. But yet before we meddle with the
star, because Ecce Magi stands first in the text, we will come
to them first, and that shall be my order in the rest, how-
soever the division w^ent ; and noAV we are at opus diei, the
proper text of the day. I have made a preparation, you see,
to it, as St. Matthew^ did, that we might all account it the
more solemn.
And first of all, we cannot but take notice of this same
Ecce, Behold. It is a word set up for the nonce ', a mark ' for the
set up in our journey to Jerusalem, and it hath two faces.
14 The time when the Magi came.
SERM. two uses in the text, one to make ns look backwards, and
. another to make us look forwards; backwards to a word,
if ye mark it, that we have left out all this while, Cam,
' V(\\cn' Christ was born ; and forwards to all the rest, ' Be-
hold, when He was born there came AYise !Men from the
East to Jerusalem/ Then, and not before, that is the first ;
and again, though not before, yet then, that is the second.
So it hath two fingers, we see, to point backwards, first, cum
natvs, ' when He was boru,^ ' they came,' venerunt, and not
before ; for as long as there was nothing to be heard of
but wrath and indignation upon the heathen, there was no
coming to God, but like children that had heavily off'ended
their father, were naturally fearful to come near so long ;
Joh. 13.8. nay, as long as Peter considers himself a sinful man, Christ
Gen. 3. 10. must not come near him neither; and Adam must hide him-
self in the bushes. INIen with all their sins about them
'until cannot endure to come near God; and therefore while' He
sent His Son to be born. That should save men from their
sins, there was no encouragement to come. But now, cum
natus, once, the second thing, then, Ecce Magi, Behold, the
AVise ]Men came presently. Now, saith your new translation,
instantly upon His birth they came, and go we and celebrate
the day so. And so the publicans in the Gospel ; they knew
not, poor men, what they should think of themselves as long
as the Pharisees were accounted the ipse% of the age, and
Lu. IS. 11. they but iste jmblicanus and hac malier. But when they saw
^^at. _ . Q]jj,jg|; keep company with them, and send into the hedges
and contemned places for the halt and the heathen, then
Lu. 1-3. 1. they began to take heart; then, saith St. Luke, drew near
unto Him all the publicans and sinners. So, though we Arere
Ezfli. 33. afraid before, yet when we hear God say once, ' As I live, I
I.ii H 23 ^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^ death of a sinner,' and Christ, that there is
room yet at supper for them which sat at the land's end in
corners and hedges, that breeds some comfort. And so when
Ex. 20. 18. God spake to us by the Law, the thunder and lightning was
so big as Ave durst not come near the mountain ; but since in
Heb. 1. 2. these last days He hath spoken to us by His Son, since the
lightning was turned into a bright star that told us a Sanour
Avas born to-day. Cum natus esset Jesus, then avc come from
tlie east, from the Avorld'.s ciul to seek Him. And so much
The Magi, their origin. 15
for tlie first use of this Ecce, "which scut us two ways back-
wards by tlie relation it had Avith the word ' when.'
But the cliief use of it is to make us look forwards^ for
there we have most to behold. ' Behold, "Wise Men came
from the East to Jerusalem^' Ecce, as if he should tell us
that it was no ordinary matter, but a thing well worth our
marking, more than we commonly take it for. "When he
comes to his Ecce once, it is sure a matter of weight, of
some great importance. So the Annunciation came with an
Ecce, Ecce concipies, and John the Baptist with an Ecce too, Lu. l. 31.
Ecce Agmis Dei, and the Angel with an Ecce too, Ecce Joii. i. 30.
evaiigelizo vobis ; all matters of much consequence, and there- "" *
fore sm-e some great thing it is, and no small matter that
St. ^latthew is about here to tell us ; Ecce Magi"^. Indeed no
small matter, that the Magi of the East, the Gentiles, should
come to Christ, and that the star should enlighten them that
sit in darkness. For what hath light to do with darkness ?
saitli the Apostle, aut quce participatio est justitice cum inigui- 2 Cor. c.
tate ? "What, should holy things be cast unto dogs ? or *
what should soothsayers do amongst the prophets, and pro-
fane diviners with the holy divinit}- of Christ ? Sure this is
a strange mystery, worth the attending and listening to,
worth the going out to see.- Ecce Magi, Behold the magi-
cians of the East. It Avas nothing such a wonder that the
Angels came down from heaven to worship Him ; they were
alwaj-s used to it before ; and though it was a strange thing
that the rude, ignorant shepherds should come and acknow-
ledge God come in the flesh, yet much more marvellous was
it that such men as these Magi, sacrilegi et maVifeci, as
St. Austin calls them", and tutored by the devil, as St. Hierome
speaks, cultores idolorum et divini nominis hostes, as St. Basil,
' See Melch. Canus, Locc. Theolog. saur. in v. Mayos ; Maldonat. in IMatth.
xi. V. p. 474. edit. 1(30-3. p. 46. edit. Par. 10.31 ; Tillemont, Mem.
■" The opinions of the Fathers re- i. 7. 426 — 431. edit. 1701. Further
specting the origin and rank of the authorities are cited bj' Wolfius in his
Magi and their journey from the East Curae PhilologicEe, and Koecher in his
to Jerusalem, have been collected and Analecta.
discussed by Casaubon. Exercit. Ba- " Passages from the writings of SS.
ron. ii. n. 10. p. 159. edit. Gcnev. 1655 ; Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, Haymo,
■\Valch. Hist. Eccl. N. T. p. 141 ; Ambrose, Justin Martyr, Hilaiy, and
Hyde, de Relig. Vet. Persarum, cap. others, in which this opinion is ex-
31. p. 372; Barradii Harm. Evang. pressed, are collected by Barradius, i,
lib. ix. cap. 8 ; Calovii, Bibl. lllust. N.T. 4 15.
torn. i. p. 154. edit. 1719 ; Suicer. The-
10 The Magi, their number.
SERM. St. Ambrose, and some other of the Fiitliers make them;
'- for them to eome and acknowledge the Son of God, as poorly
as He lay, tliis was beyond an ordinary miracle. Or ^yhether
these ]\Iagi were such kind of men or no, or but only so
called for their admirable wisdom and learning, or their
account above other people, as the ^;////o5ojo/i« were among
the Grecians, and the sapientes and dodores among the
Latins, which is St. Chrysostom^s, and Anselm^s, and Bede's
opinion, besides many otlier°, both of ancient and modern
writers, and which is the fairest sense for us to follow, seeing
our own Church hath gone before us in it, and translated it
so, " Behold, AYise j\Ien,^^ I say if they were but thus, yet
Gentiles they were, remote from God's covenant, even as far
as the ends of the earth Avere from Jerusalem, the east from
the west ; and therefore St. Matthew might well set an Ecce
upon it, and bid us wonder how they should come thither.
Ecce venerunt magi.
I will not now trouble myself and you both, as many do, to
tell you how many of these Magi there were, three, or more ;
or to tell you a tale out of Petrus de Palude how, being kings
at first, thev left that office for St. Thomas to make them all
archbishops in their country, and how after two of them
were dead, and laid close together in their graves, they
started one from another to make room for the third; and
how Helen, Constantino's mother, begged their bodies, of
the patriarch there, and carried them to Constantinople,
> Milan and from thence how thev came to INIillaine' in St. Am-
' Cologne brose's days, and then to Colein- at last, which makes them
now to be called the Three Kings of Colein ; and what their
names were besides all this. These kind of speculations will
do us little stead, which way soever they go. Yet for their
numberP as I would not be too curious to search, so I would
not be too boisterous to condemn and think every thing
popery that we read not in the text. It hath been a very
ancient tradition, (Leo hath it in his Sermons,) and perhaps
" Barradius supplies a large collec- Sermonum ad Fratres in Eremo, Serm.
tiou of such authorities. 43, Aiiselinus, Innoccntius in Serm. de
P Rogas quotnam fuerintmagi ? Re- Epiph., Bernardus in Serm. 6. de vigi-
spondemus fuisse tres ex rcccpta sen- lia Nativ. pastores trcs, tres quoque
tentia. Tres fuisse sentit Divus Leo, niagos numcrat. Barrad. Harm. lib. i.\.
in Sermonibus de Epiphania, Author cap. 8.
?:fL>
Kingly diynity of the Magi. 17
at the first they liad better reason for it than wc know of
now. And for their dignity, whether they Mxre kings or no,
I cannot tell; yet Tertullian^ says (and Tiilly'' likewise before
him) they would have no other kings there but Magi, such
as these were ; and it hath been an old custom of the Church
(howsoever our new masters deride it) to apply that saj'ing
in the Psalms, 'The kings of Tharsis and of the isles shall Ps. 72. lo.
bring gifts,^ and that in Isaiah, 'The Gentiles shall walk in Is. 60. 3.
Thy light, and kings at the brightness of Thy rising^ up,' — to
these Wise Men. Kings ! why doth not St. Matthew call
them so then? There may be reason for that. It more
concerns us and God too, to have Christ acknowledged by
the wise, than by any king w^hatsoever ; and perhaps he
would teach us by it that the greatest honoiu^ we can have
is to be wise men (it is a good use for us to make of it, at
least) :
Regem non faciunt opes ;
Rex est qui posuit metus
Et diri mala pectoris '.
Herod indeed, he might afford him the name of a king well
enough, it was the only thing he had to stand upon : but for
them that had wisdom to commend them, and came to
"worship Him that had no kingdom of this world, it was
no gi'eat matter to tell of then* kingdoms. Herod, we know,
made so much of his crown that rather than it should off
he would murder all the coasts about him ; whereas they
contemned theirs so much (if they had any) that they took
them off themselves and threw them at Christ's feet. So
that they might be kings, for all St. Matthew calls them
not so ; or if not kings, as the tradition and some authority
goes, yet all stories will make them the nobles and great
ones of their country, men of no small account, as likely to
be kings, such as they had in these parts, as any else.
And here now we may set up the Ecce again. Ecce Magi.
Not men of mean condition, the outcasts of the people, or
1 Nam et magos reges fere habuit ' Tertullian, in the passage just
oriens. Tertull. adv. Judcecs, cap. ix. quoted, makes a similar application of
p. J92. edit. 1664. Ps. 72. 15. See Lorini Comment, in
t Non potest quisquam rex esse Per- Ps. 71. 11. p. 335. edit. 1619.
sarum, qui non ante magorum disci- ' L. A. Senecae Thyestes, Chorus in
plinam perceperit. Cic. de Divin. lib. 1. Act ii. p. 484. edit. Lugd. Bat. 1651.
cosiN. r
18 IVliy their coming ivas delayed.
S E Ji M. poor pilgrims that had little else to clo^ but men of authority
^- and rule where thcv were, men famous besides for their
knowledge, whose books to look on were as large as the
heavens. Beguli at least, if not reyes, came from the East
to Jerusalem, great men, the unlikehest of any to take so
much pains for devotion ; more ready, a man would think, as
these times go, to take theii' pleasure at home than to go
upon pilgrimage abroad ; to attend the world than to go and
worship Him that had notldng of it. And yet, great ones as
they were, they came for all that, to tell us, first, who should
come after, how the only way to be great is to be little, lowly
before God the only way to be accounted kings, to be servants,
to come and worship God ; which Ave acknowledge every day
in oiu' Church service, Cui servire regnare est, as the old
collect" goes, 'Whose servdce is perfect freedom,^ that is a
kingdom right. And then to watch besides, that godliness
and greatness would do well together, the king's house and
God's house joined close to one another, for the more honoiu*
of both. The great ones of oiu- age take journeys too, but it
is for another purpose, not for religion's sake. Yes, saith
Rev. 6. 8. St. John, I saw him riding upon a brave horse, but Death and
Hell were his companions. Be we then what we will be,
rich, or wise, or great, we had need take care where we go,
for fear of such companions by the way. The best way
will be to follow those Magi, even in their way to Christ ;
and then we shall not have darkness and death, but God's
Spirit and a star in heaven go along with us.
But before we can go any further in the pilgrimage, there
is a stop by the way, and that is one that asks us why these
Gentiles come so late ? Why not they, learned and quick
men, as soon as the ignorant and dull shepherds ? We might
say that the East was further off a great deal than the next
field ; but howsoever, sure I am that the Jews were nearer
to God than the Gentiles, we were all strangers to the cove-
nant ; et ergo (says one) qui remotiores erant a fwdere tardius
Acts 13. accesserunt, and the Gospel ought first to come to you, saith
St. Paul to the Jews. Therefore came the Magi last. And
" Deus, auctor pacis et amator, tiia fidemus, nuUius hostilitatis arma
quern nosse vivere, cui servive regnare timeamus; per Jesum Christum, Domi-
est; protege ab omnibus iinj)ugiiationi- num nostrum. Amen. S. Greg. Lib.
bus supplices tuos, ut (jui in def'ensione Sacr. Missa pro pace.
Their journey from afar country. 19
then (becavise there are more questions) Christ was not ma-
nifested to the learned, but the ignorant Jews; nor to the
rcHgious and just men of the time, but to the sinful Gentiles;
nee cloetis, nee justis (saith St. Austin,) quipjje Qui venerat
stulta eliyere id confunderet sapientes, and not to call thcMat. 9. 13.
rigliteous but sinners to repentance. Therefore came the
Magi, sinful men. And lastly : He was made known to the
Jews in the j^ersons of shepherds, and to the Gentiles in the
persons of great men, that we might knoAv how the chief
pastors and ministers of Christ^s Chui'ch should come from
the Jews, as St. Peter and the rest of the Apostles ; but the
chief defenders of it, kings and princes, they should come
out of the Gentiles, as indeed they did. Therefore came the
Magi, great men.
And now the way is clear, I go on. Ecce Mayi venerunt.
' Came.' So the persons we have done with all, and now we
are at their full pilgrimage. ' Came from the East.' And
here we will go apace, for we have a great way yet to Christ,
the end of their journey and of my text. I am afraid it will
grovr late before I shall get half way.
And first therefore, it ^vdll not be best to trouble you with
knowing what country they came from^, whether from Persia,
as St. Chrysostom and St. Basil ; or Arabia, as Justin MartjT
and Cyprian ; or from Chaldea, as Maximus and Chrysologus ;
or from the furthest part of Ethiopia, as Hilarius Arelatensis
thinks ; or with counting how much time they spent in com-
ing so far; — this would stay us too long on our way; and
therefore we wdll haste on without enquiring after them.
' From the East.' Not from the next door, or a town hard
by, but a longe, exew from far, even as the Ethiopian in the
Acts (whom some think they sent afterwards) came from the Acts 8. 27.
ends of the earth to worship at Jerusalem. A hard journey
sure they had, saith St. Chrysostom, for besides the long way Opp. vii.
there were huge mountains and horrid deserts, great floods ^^'
and rivers to pass, wild beasts and (what is more) beastly and
wild men to pass by. And yet by all these difficulties they
came, even from the East to Jerusalem.
^ S. Chrysos. i. 498, 499 ; vii. 86, Taur. ap. Bibl. Pat. v. i. 28 : S. Chry-
&c. : S. Basil, ii. 600: S. Just. Mart. solog. id. v. ii. 774, 175: S. Hilar. 210.
174,175: S. Cypr. Ixxxix : S. Maxim. edit. Benedict.
c2
20 Modern siqnneness censured.
s E R, M. Now Avhfit a sliarac was it for tlic Jews wliicli were round
=: about Hinij that the Gentiles from tlie East should come to
seek Christ and they sit secure and idle at home, never en-
quiring after Him. Or rather what a far worse shame is it
for us, which be Christians now, Avhen the heathen that
dwelt at the world's end, and had so hard a journej'-, would
come to serve and worship Christ ; and we, that dwell even
at the next door, will scarce take the pains to do it, nay if
1 Kings 6. our chambers look into God's house, as we read the king's
Q
entry was tiunied into the temple, yet we stir but at our
leisure ; the least business, if it be but a little more desire of
sleep, will hinder us; and if we be seated but a little way off
1 Kings once, Avhy then Jeroboam's counsel is very good, it is too
much to go up to Jerusalem. These Wise Men here shall not
have our company by the mountains and deserts, we are more
tenderly brought up ; by them ? no ! not through a shower
of rain (nay if it rains we will not go to chui'ch ;) our ordi-
nary sleep, or the beams of the sun will keep some of us in,
so dainty we are that we cannot endure it truly; and if no
body else will go, Christ may comfort Himself with His
Mother's arms, for we have neither worship, nor gold, nor
frankincense, nothing for Him. A greater offence, sure then,
Mat. 12. we use to make of it. These men of the East shall rise up in
Mts 11 j^tlgi^cnt, nay many more shall come fi^om the East, and
from the West, and sit with Christ one day, to tell us as much.
But as we go along, there is another yet that meets us, to
ask, why from the East ? there were Gentiles in the north
and south too, why not from them as well, but from the East
alone ? Marry best of all from hence, it suits well to make
Gen. 3. 24. even with Eve in Paradise, that as from the East came the
first news of sin, so from thence should come the first news
of saving us from sin ; and to make even with Balaam too.
Num. 23. that as he came a mont'thus Orientis, to curse God's people, so
these IMagi (that some say'' were his scholars far removed)
should come ab Oriente too, to bless all the generations of the
* Alii vero dicaiit illos fuisse nepotes regcm natum, et venerunt. Rcmig. in
Balaam, quod magis est credeiuliim ; Th. Aquhi. Aur. Cat. Et sic hanc
Balaam enim inter Ctetera qua? proplic- stellam futurani vaticinio Balaam no-
tavit, dixit, Orietuv Stella ex Jacob. Illi verant, ciijus erant successores. Hieron.
vero habentes hanc proplietiam, mox ut ibid.
viderunt stellam novam, iiitellexerunt
7.
Why the Mayi came 'from the East.' 21
Gentiles after them. And indeed, from AvLenee should they
come but from the East ? Omnes qui veniunt ad Christum,
saith RemigiuSj must come ab Ipso"' from Ilim fii'st ; now
He is the true day-spring, — Oriens nomen Ejus &c. — as
Zecharias speaks. Zech.6.l2.
Then this was the beginning of oiu' bliss, the very morning
of oiu' happiness ; and therefore, as the morning and day
begin, so began that, ab Oriente, from the East both ; and
then because the sun follows the day in the East too, it was
most fit that such as brought us news of the Sun of Righte-
ousness, the Hght that liglitens every man Avhich cometh into Joh. i. 9.
the world, should come from thence too^. And if ye mark it,
it was the most glorious Sun that arose here of the two ; —
the sun in the firmament being but a created body, this. He
that made that so, that to lighten the body, and this to
illuminate the mind. And now since we have begun to com-
pare Him with the sun, we will make it good every way ; for as
He rose here in the East among the Gentiles, so He set in
the West among the Jews. [And Jerusalem may well be
called occidens, (says one'',) the Sun of Righteousness went
down there ; or occidens either, an ye will, for besides that,
it killed the Prophets, and stoned them that were sent unto Mat. 23.
her: at last it killed the great Prophet — even the Son of^'"
God Himself ''.J And by this time we are come to Jerusalem.
' Behold there came Wise Men fi-om the East to Jerusa-
lem;' so their coming was like the sun's too, from east to
west, and west was Jerusalem right, for it Avas full of dark-
ness, they had almost lost their light, it was even a-going
out, and ergo time for a Sun to rise out of the East, Avhicli
might give light to them that were sitting in the dark west,
the shadow of death.
But to let pass the allegory, (which indeed should never be
strained too far,) they came to Jerusalem ; but why thither ?
y Sed tunc quserendum est quare ^ ]Merito ab oriente venerunt qui So-
Evangelistadicateosab oriente venisse? lem Justitia novum nobis ortum an-
Quod ideo est, quia ab ilia regione ve- nunciant, Isetisque rumoribus totura
nerunt quae in orientali parte Judseis mundum illuminant. Ludolph. de Sax-
posita est. Pulchre autem ipsi ab ori- onia, in Vita Cbristi, cap. xi.
ente venisse dicuntur ; quia omnes qui * See Barradii Harm. lib. x. cap. xii.
ad Dominum veniunt, ab Ipso et per ^ The passage here enclosed within
Ipsum veniunt. Ipse enim est oriens, brackets is marked in the original as if
secundum illud, Ecce vir, Oriens nomen for omission,
ejus. Remig. ibid.
23 Why the Magi came to Jerusalem.
S E R ]M. Christ was at Bethlehem. Oli, but this was the gi'eat city,
'- ' the city of tlie great Kino:/ and most like they should find
I's. 48 2. . "
the King they souglit for there. Yet there He was not, and
I told you tlic reason before ; then why came they ? INIarry,
for many reasons; there was first the Law and the Prophets,
and God will have them looked in, even in the very search of
His Son; — to let us know the true way to Him, and to
Joh. 5. 39. eternal life, (as Christ Himself speaks,) was by the Scriptiu'cs.
Then there was the chief seat of the laud, whither God would
have the news of the Messias brought, rather than to any
other place, that from thence all the regions round about
might take notice of it ; for if they had come to Joppa or Je-
richo only, there might have been some excuses made, that
we on this side Jordan had not heard of Him, but from Jeru-
salem every body must needs take knowledge of it. And then
again here were the Ipse% of the time, the Scribes and Pha-
risees, and masters of the Law, that would have scorned to
have been told of their new-born King by a company of silly
shepherds, or to have searched the Prophets for them. And
therefore it was fit the princes and great men of the East,
since they were now a-coming, should go by the way to
Jerusalem to bring these master-Jews the news of their
King ; for how contemptible soever the shepherds' relation
would liave been, yet when such men came as the world
admired for their wisdom and greatness, and came from far
too, from the East, not likely to come in vain, it was like
they would receive their testimony. But whatsoever a man
would think, yet we see that they believed nothing, not one
of them would go to Bethlehem to worship with the Magi ;
that their coming now to Jerusalem was to condemn and
shame the Jews, even the best of them, when these should
take such pains, come from the ends of the earth to the
King of the Jbavs, and the Jews themselves take no heed of
Him, when these heathen men should, witli the light of one
star see Christ was come in the flesh, and they, who had a
continual light among them, the Law and the Prophets,
should be so blind as not to see Him ; nay, and when they
did see Him there and shewed Him to these men, as we see
a little after my text, yet could not go along with them to
acknowledge Him. But yet, as ill as they were, God would
Wliy the Mayi came to Jei-usakm. 23
have tlie Magi to come that way, for to teacli lis one lesson
more, and that is that, omnia non manifestantur omnibus, and
therefore they must come tliis way to ask what tliey knew
not, where Christ was born. In the search of holy things
•we stand in need of great help, and since we cannot know
all of ourselves, we must learn one of another, the Jews of
the Magi, that there was a King born, and they of the Jews
where He should be born. And last of all, to shew that this
was the time when the Jew and Gentile should come to-
gether, and be no longer parted; but since the King of
Peace was come, that they should enter into peace too, teach
one another the way to Chi-ist. And therefore this was the
right way they took, the way of peace, the way that Christ
would have them, Who is The Way Himself; so they came joh. 14. 6.
from the East to Jerusalem, the ' city of peace ^ too, and this
was right to guide their feet in the way of peace.
And now we have followed them thus far, and are come
along Avith them to Jerusalem, fain would we see what they
do there, and so go along with them to Bethlehem too. But
it is even fallen out as I told you I feared before, it is grown
late before we can go any further, and therefore best staying
here, for if we should go on, there be so many steps to be
taken in the way, that the night would overtake us ere we
should get to the text's end. But all the day must not be
spent in preaching ; and therefore since we are at Jerusalem,
the city of peace, crying ' Glory be to God on high, and
peace on earth,^ let us take the peace of God along with us
and so depart for this time.
Now the peace of God which passeth all understanding,
keep our hearts and minds in the knowledge and love of God,
and of His Son Jesus Christ our Lord, That was this day made
knoAvn unto us, and the blessing of God Almighty, the Father,
the Son, and the Holy Ghost, be among us, and remain with
us always. Amen.
SEHMON 11.
A FUNERAL SERMON ^
AT ST. martin's IN THE FIELDS, ON THE SEVENTEENTH OF JUNE, A.D.
MDCXXIII, AT THE FUNERAL OF MRS. DOROTHY HOLMES ''j SISTER TO THE
RIGHT REVEREND FATHER IN GOD, THE LORD BISHOP OF DURHAM.
S E R M. We are come hither to perform a double duty to this our
— — — sister deceased, to commit her body to the ground, the first,
and to commend her good name and memory to the world,
the second. While she was alive, she had her soul, her body,
and her good name ; but as for her soul, God has taken it to
Himself, but these two He has left behind with us to preserve
and lay up for Him while '^ His own coming at the last day.
I will speak somewhat of both.
And though her body be now to us as all other dead bodies
are, brought hither by us to be decently interred in the earth;
yet — because the reason of the Churches' ceremony, as we too
well know, perhaps, being made but a matter of course and
common custom only — ^we will tell you now once for all why
we do it, not only to her, but to all other that depart, as she
hath done, in the faith of Christ.
The Church then would have us consider, that as God hath
taught us to put a difference between the soul of a beast and
the sjiirit of a man, (for the soul of a beast goes downward to
the earth from whence it came, but the spirit of a man returns
» This Sermon, after being consider- 1837 to the British Museum by John
ably altered and abridged, was subse- Holmes, Esq., F. S.A., one of the
quently used upon an occasion nearly assistant Librarians of that institution,
similar. See Appendix, No. 2. The Dedication however makes no
'' It is probable that the Dorothy mention of relationship, although it
Holmes here mentioned was sister to recites the many favours which had
Bishop Neile, and tliat she was the wife been confeiTed upon the writer by the
of William Holmes mentioned in Bishop.
his will as his brother. A Walter MVhile, i.e. mitil, as in Macbeth iii. 1.
Holmes wrote a ' Septimana Epigram- We will keep ourself
matum,'dedicated to the Bjshop,of which While supper- time alone; while
the unpublished MS. was presented in then, God bless you.
Death, a sleep to the Christian. 25
to God That gave it, as the Wise Man speaks,) so likewise He Eecl. 3.21.
hath taught us to put a difference between their bodies too.
The bodies of other creatures consume away and perish, and
shall never be heard on again, after they are once dead. But
our bodies are not so, for though the soul be now gone from
it, yet one day it shall return to it and make it stand up from
the grave. AVhen we sleep you see we rise again, and this
death of the body is but a little longer sleep than ordinary,
which is the reason that we read so often in Scripture how
the kings of Israel slept with their fathers. Nay, it is but a See 2 Sam.
rest, saith David, a rest from the troubles and cares of this I'S.
' ' 1 Kings
world, and not a bare rest, and no more, but a rest in hope : 2. lo.
'my flesh shall rest in hope,^ saith the Prophet, in hope of i Thes.4.
being raised up again at the last day, to a far better state i-"^- ^^-
than ever it was in in this world ; which hope other creatures ^^^^ 2 26
have not.
The difference then being so great, since it is not God's
pleasui'e that oiu* bodies should be neglected and cast away,
as the bodies of other dead creatures are ^, to become dung
for the earth, and to have our bones lay scattered abroad to
the sight of the sun : it was the Prophet^s complaint, that Ps. 79. 2.
they gave the dead bodies of His servants to be meat unto
the fowls of the air, and the flesh of His saints unto the
beasts of the land^, that their blood ran about like water,
and that there was none to bury them. And that being such
a kind of barbarous inhumanity, God and the Churcli have
taken order for it, that when His servants are gathered to
their fathers, their souls gone up to heaven, there should be
care taken to have theii' bodies laid up with honour, seemly,
and decently, in the bed of the earth, while' it shall please "until,' as
God to awaken it again. ^ '"^'
In the earth ? nay, that is not enough ; for then what
need we to make all this solemn procession to the church ;
we have earth enough every where about our houses, and we
'^ Orig. contra Celsum, lib. viii. ol rr]v ri^i.)]v rov aoc/j-aros, evQa \oyiK7}
edit. 0pp. de la Rue, torn. i. p. 764. ^vxv wK-rjne, trsincrTevKaat, Kal eV
ypvxv'' \oyiK^i/ tijjlo.v fjL6vr]v r]fj.e7s tcr^j.^v, avTov rpaffi h^^ajxevov KaKSis ayouiaaixi-
Kai TO. ravrris opyava fx^To. rt/xris vrapa- vrjv Sia toiovtov ovpdvov x^/uxv^-
5i5o!/ai KaTo. TO. vivoixiaixiva racprj' a^iov ^ Non patiemur figurani et figmen-
yap rh ttjs KoyiKris 4'^X^s olKr]TripLov turn Dei feris ac voluciibus in prtedam
fiH) irapappiTTTfli/ aTi/xcos, Kal ois irvx^v, jacere, sed reddamus id terrae, unde
ofiolciis T(f. rwv a\6ywv Kol fxaAKTra, Hts ortum est. Lactant. Instit. yi. 12,
26 Commendation of the deceased.
s E 11 M. might lay our dead bodies there. But it is not God's mil
y^ that our bodies should be buried as an ass is bm-ied, in the
Jer.22.19. ^^j^^jj^qj^ flgi^jg . ]^^^ j^ero is a place chosen out and dedicated
to that purpose ; and therefore Abraham would not bury his
dead in the corn fields, nor among the Ilethites, but we see
Gen. 2.5. he purchased the plain of Mamre to lay the bodies of
31 '32!*' ^od's servants up in peace together. And so after his ex-
ample has the Church ordered amongst us, that are of the
See Bingh. sccd of Abraham, and accordingly are we met together to
xxiu.ii.§ 1. ^,Q^^^j(. ^1^(3 fiej^ti |jo(jy of this His servant, our sister departed,
to her hallowed grave in peace, and in hope of the glorious
resurrection hereafter. That, for the first duty to her.
Now as there is a dift'erence betwixt men and other
creatures, for their bodies, so there is a difference betwixt
men themselves too, for preser\ing their good name ; which
is our second duty to be performed towards her.
There are indeed those that die and perish, and have
nothing worth the remembering left behind them, people
that arc clean forgotten and out of mind as soon as they are
gone, as though they never were. But yet there are others
Ecclus. which are honourable in their generations, as Ecclesiasticus
**■ '■ speaks, and well reported of in their times, Avhich have left a
name behind them, that when they are gone their praise
may still be spoken of and their names be had in continual
remembrance. Among which company we esteem this om'
sister deceased.
And to make good what we say, we will a little Aiew her
life and death ; by both Avhich men are sufficiently tried what
they are.
She was born of an honest and religious parentage, which,
as it was not obscm-e then, so it has been since, by the worth
of them which Avere nearest allied unto her, made honom-able
to the world. But howsoever that had gone, being good, she
was great enough, \ii'tue being the best thing to measure
gi'eatness by, when all is done.
Her education was suitable to her birth, such as befitted
her in all honesty and piety; and though there be many
alive that can bear witness to it, yet the best and surest
testimony of that are the fruits that she shewed of it in the
ensuing course of her time afterwards.
Tlie education of herself and her children. 27
Her discretion and understanding grew as fast as her age ;
and in her discourse^ licr apprehensions of any thing pro-
pounded, and her answers to it, were many times noted to
be more than ordinary ; of such a strong and vigorous spirit
she was.
Of the innocency of her life, they of her continual acquaint-
ance and [who] knew her behaviour can generally affirm that
as she was commendable for many good things, so she was
careful to keep herself from all blemish of vice, and used the
best means she could to keep always an undefiled conscience.
And as of herself, so she was sedulous and very affec-
tionate in the education of her children, that they might
serve God and the commonwealth, some in one course of life,
and some in another ; and one of them to her great comfort
and content she lived to see pass two degrees of schools in
the University, howsoever it pleased God to take him away
sooner than she expected. There are now, that neither of
themselves, nor of their offspring neither, have any regard at
all, but let them run riot, they care not which way, and if
they will proAC good, so it is, let nature work, and so let grace
work too, an it will, they will not force them to it, nor it
shall not grieve them much whether they do or no. She was
of another mind, so careful to have them do well, that it
grieved her when she heard of any other did ill.
She had not much, and yet she was so well esteemed as
she wanted not, but always laid in that sort as befitted her
best ; and yet though her stock was not great, nevertheless
out of her little which she had, she would not let them want
her bounty that had less than she, being noted to be so
charitable, as that the sight of any poor creature would
make her stand still to give her alms ; and besides what love
she shewed to many others at home in that kind, those that
lived with her, and knew what her actions were, can give an
ample testimony.
Her attii'e was sober and decent, and she took no great
care to make much of that body which she knew she must
one day part withal, to the grave. Marry, now, for her soul,
as we all should be, that she was a little more careful on. I
will tell you how : myself can witness that her devotions she
daily observed, and when sickness did not hinder her, offered
28 Her afflictions through life.
S E R M. up her Morning and her Evening Sacrifice according to the
— — : — order of our Church in the public phice of God's service, in
His hallowed teniple, tlie most kiudh' place for that purpose
that can be ; and when she could not come forth by reason of
her infirmities, what her private devotions were, you may
guess by that.
Indeed it pleased God to visit her with many crosses and
infirmities of this life, but they came not to her soul, they
did but touch her body. And no strange thing neither, it is
God's wont to do so to them that are dearest to Him ; He
will not suffer them that are His to feed like flesh-worms
upon the pleasiu'es of this life, but keeps them to hard
measure here that they may have their fill hereafter. It is
St. Gregory's observation, those oxen that are designed to
the slaughter-house are suff'ered to run and range at their
will in the pleasant pastures, and are put to no labour at all ;
but those that are appointed to live, ai'e put into the plough
and to the yoke, and are beaten and whipped every da}'. So
the less crosses and infirmities upon us, marry, the worse
sign; when we have wealth, and riches, and the world at
will, it is a danger but we shall run headlong to perdition,
and fat ourselves up for the slaughter onh^ But when God
holds His scourge of tribulation over us, and whips our
bodies, it will make us look to oui* souls the better ; we shall
still be kept in, and be the more careful of, His service.
But for all these troubles, she was content to bear what
God laid upon her, even to her death. And when her infir-
mity grew so strong upon her as she betook herself to her
chamber and her bed, that afterwards she breathed her last
in, her conclusion was not different from her premises, nor
her death from her life.
Being warned of her danger she shewed no dismay, as
carrying in her conscience the safe-conduct of iunocencyj
and being not in love with her own desires, she committed
herself to the good-will and pleasure of God. Her preparation
to her end was by humble contrition, and hearty Confession
of her sins ; which when she had done, she received the benefit
of Absolution, according to God's ordinance and the religious
institution of our Church ; a thing that the world looks not
after now, as if Confession and Absolution were some strange
Her last sickness. 29
superstitious tilings among us, which yet the Church lias
taken such care to preserve, and especially to be preparatives
for death.
When they had given her physic for her body, it presently
put her in mind that there was other physic to be taken for
her soul; and so she presenth^ sent unto me, who in my
priestly function was ready to attend, to have the blessed
Sacrament given her, which she received from me with such
gladness of her soul, and with such humility and reverence of
her body (thougli she might hardly cndiu'c it by reason of
her infirmity) that we might easily understand she knew
very Avell what a great INIajcsty she was then to adore, and
what admirable and mysterious benefits she was to receive.
Such was her devotion upon the first falling into her last
and fatal sickness.
Now the common guise of the world goes another way ;
as soon as we feel oiu'selves sick, presently post away all the
servants we have, this way and that way for the physicians
of our body to come and help us ^ ; but for the physicians of
oiu' souls, them we never dream on, as if they would do well
enough without any physic at all, which yet (God knows)
want it ten times more than our bodies do, and are sicker a
great deal than they be.
'Well, when she was strengthened with this heavenly and
spiritual repast, she set herself to combat with death. And
whereas others use to be so much afraid to meddle with it,
she was not one Avhit dismayed; but shewing her willingness
to be dissolved and to be with Christ, often in mine OAvn
hearing desii'ed that death would come to her to bring her
ovit of these miseries to the joys of heaven. Nor was she so
disposed as many are, call for death to make us believe that
they are wilUng to die, and then wish it gone again when it
comes ; like as Laertius tells us the story of Antisthenes, a
philosoj)her, that led his life well, and was loth to part with
it, if he knew how to have kept it, though he seemed to
' Si intemperate cibus sumtiis aut foro, omnes cakimniae, omnia liicra in
immoderate potus acceptus levem cor- periculis corporis conquiescvmt. Cur-
pori febriculam concitarit, dejicimus ritur ad medicos ; et pro remedio pro-
animum, affligimur, suspiramus ; nulla mittuntur munera, aurum, argentum.
cura time est seculi, nulla villarum, S. Hieron. (?) Epist. 8. p. 42. edit
nemo de patrimonio cogitat, nemo de Ant. 1579.
30 Her preparation for death.
s E R M. others to be desirous to be rid of it. The man being tied to
_ — his bed by a gi'ievous disease, was visited by Diogenes, that
knowing the natiu'e of him very well, had taken a sword
with him under his gown. As soon as ever he comes in,
Antisthenes looks upon him, and cries out for pity, ' O
God,^ says he, ' who will deliver me from hence !' ' Marry,
that will I,^ says Diogenes presently, and so shews him the
sword in his hand, ' this shall do it.' ' Oh God,' says
Antisthenes, ' no, no, I mean from my pains, and not from
my life / he was loth to part with that, whatsoever he said ?.
So Esop tells us of an old man that being laden with a great
burden and fallen into a ditch and lying tliere a long time
without hope, at last calls aloud for Death. Well, Death
comes to him, and bids him go along with him ; ' O no,' says
he, ' I caR thee to help me up Avith my burden, that I may
return ;' he was loth to stand to his word too ^. But for
her, now, her willingness that she had professed at first, she
continued to her last day ; and when death came, it was
welcome to her ; she made no reluctation at all. And though
she had sore pangs upon her by reason of her long sickness,
yet God gave her such patience to endure it as it was almost
a marvel to us that saw it. During the time of her sickness,
which was a long while together, she oflered up with us the
continual sacrifice of prayer, to God, l)oth morning and
evening and at noon-day, besides her continual ejaculations.
" Ob. Jun. She made open profession of her faith, and she died a true
member of the Church, and the child of God. She enjoyed
her judgment as long as she breathed, and when her tongue
could speak no longer, her thoughts oifered up her last de-
votions ; and so, while the penitential Psalms were read over
her ', she eftsoons went to God : and as one rather fallen
asleep than dying, she most happily took her leave of all
mortal miseries. Such was the life, and such was the death
of this our sister ; both so full of comfort that it may be a
sufficient lenitive to the grief of any of her friends that have
lost her, and if that be not enough, we will liave a text fitted
for it that shall.
8 DiofT. Lacrt. p. 376. edit. Casaub. of his edition of Longinus, p. 252, 8vo.
8vo. apud Stcphan. 15!J4. Oxon. 170S.
'■ See the fable T^piav koX Bavaros, ' Sec Cosin's Devotions, ' Prayers
in TEsopi Fab. edit. Hudson, at the end at the Hour of Death.'
The subject introduced. 31
2 Cor. 5. 1, 2. For we know that if oiu' earthly house
of this tabernacle be dissolved, we have a building of
Godj an house not made Avith hands, but eternal in the
lieavens.
For which we sigh and groan.
If any man has set his heart here upon these things below,
and is afraid to part with his life, as not knowing where to
get the like again when this is gone, St. Paid comes to in-
struct him here, and to inform his knowledge a little better :
to tell him that he is afraid (as the Psalmist speaks) where Ps. 53. 5.
no fear is, and that the loss of this life is no such fearful
matter as men take it for, no undoing of him, but an
infinite advantage to him, bringing him to a life so full
of joy and happiness, that this present life, as St. Paul Rom.8.l8.
speaks but a little before, is not worth the naming in re-
spect of that.
And that this may appear to be true, he has di'awn the
pictures of them both out here to the life, made us a descrip-
tion of either life, of this which we have now, and of that
which we shall have by death, that we might judge ourselves
which of the two is most to be desii'ed. But he describes them
in such a fashion that men that are not acquainted with his
spirit, will wonder what he means. For whereas the world
is wont to paint us out the pleasures of this life in such an
amiable form, fuU of bravery and state, and make us pictures
of death in such a pitiful shape, with a few naked bones knit
together, that it would scare a man to look upon it, ye see
he goes quite another way, gives us a picture of this life that
has nothing but misery and horror in it, and a description
of death that would entice a man^s eyes to look upon it, so
fair and beautiful it is ; the one compared to a poor cottage,
which every one passes by without looking on it ; and the
other to a fair, rich, building, that every body stays to gaze at
and admire. pSo we read of an old philosopher, Egesias'',
that had such a dexterity this way, as when he painted the
portraiture of this life, he did it in such a rueful form as all
the people ran away from it when they saw it ; and when he
J The passage here enclosed within as if intended to be omitted,
brackets has been so marked by Cosin, '' See Cicer. Quaest. Tusc. 1. 34.
32 Division of the text.
S E R M. made the picture of death, he did it with such a smiHng
'- — countenance, as every body that came to look on it fell in
loA'e with it, and began to be weary of this miserable hfe,
they would needs desii'e to live no longer.]
Such another thing it is that St. Paul would work in us
here, a contempt of this life in regard to the life to come,
and a willingness to welcome death, (look it as it will,) in re-
gard to the great happiness that it brings with it. Will you
look upon the text, and there, as I tell you, ye shall see the
description, first, of the poor and miserable estate of man
in this world, and then the description of that perfect felicity
which he shall enjoy after death in the world to come. And
these two, which be the general parts of the text, are opposed
in four several antitheses.
The first, that this life and this body of ours is earthly,
' our earthly house j' and that, heavenly, ' eternal in the
heavens.'
The second, that this is 'a tabernacle,' a slight, flitting
house ; and that, ' a building,' a strong lasting house, ' we
have a building.'
The third, that this is a tabernacle of our own : and that,
' a building of God / so much the better.
And the fourth, that tliis is a house which will fall, and
must be ' dissolved ;' and that, a house which will stand for
ever, and is ' eternal in the heavens.'
And all this, not out of any opinion, or guessing at it, but
upon certain knowledge and assurance ; ' we know' it, saith
St. Paul, which produces the effect of all, a longing and a
desiring after it, ' for which we sigh and groan.' And
these be the parts of the text. Of these, &c.
THE PRAYER.
I begin, as the text begins, with the certain knowledge and
assurance of all this felicity after death. ' We know.' It
is the confidence that we Christians have, and sure we have
no small privilege by it above other men : for all the natural
discourse of the world will not reach to this ' know,' but it
is the Spirit of God that infuses it into us. The philosophers
had a guessing at the immortality of the soul, but they knew
Passage in Job discussed. 33
not well whether they should say so or no ; now there is uo
guessing at the matter, nor no opinion about it, as they had,
God knows how many, but a certain, infallible assiu'ance.
AYe ' know' it is so.
[Know' it? Certainly by the order of nature there must
be a little doubting about it. For Avhat, and if the devil
sliould come with his sophistry now to shake this foimdation
of oiu" faith ? and are Ave so sure of life again after death ?
or that our body, which lies mouldered in the grave for worms
to make their beds' in, shall be raised up to glor}'? ' "Wlio Job ii. 4.
is he,' saitli Job, 'that can bring a clean thing out of filthi-
ness ? there is not one.' It is an easy thing to bring a man
to his end, to put him into his grave, but to fetch him out
again and make him live, what hope have ye of that ? It is
true, indeed, there is some hope of a tree, if that be cut Job 14. 7-
down, yet it Avill sprout again, and though the root waxes dry ' '
and the stock be dead, yet a little Avater will fetch it again,
and make it grow as well as ever it did. But with us that
are men, now there is no such matter. 'Did you ever see
an old man grow young again, with all the pains that might
be taken about him ? Whv, no more shall ye see a dead
man made alive again,' says the devil. And so he would
persuade us that there were no life after this ; at least, that
there were no such knowledge and assurance of it as tlie
Apostle speaks of here, but that it might be called in ques-
tion, for all we ktiow it so well. Nay, he comes to us like a
ghostly father, with a Bible in his hand, and would fain make
us believe what we must trust to, for it is written, and it is
written in Job (it is a shrewd place, I would wish you to look
to it, that you might know how to answer him another time)
14. 12™. 'For man sleepcth and riseth not, he shaU not wake
again, nor be raised from his sleep till the heaven be uo more.'
!Marry now, if God would send a fiery chariot for us before
we die, as He did for Elias, or carry us from the Avorld 2 Kings 2.
. • 11
upon Angels' wings, as old Enoch was carried, then indeed qJ^^ 5 24.
there were some hope of living in tliis same place of glory
that we speak on ; but to die first, and be thrown into the
earth, and there become earth ourselves, and if a man looks
' The passage in brackets is mtrked "' See Pineda in Job, p. 40G. edit,
the original for omission. Paris. 1631.
COSIN. I>
34 Confidence in the resun'ection.
s E R M. after twenty years not to know what is become of ns, there
is no HkeHhood of it this way, we perish and die, and where
are we ? saj^s Job. Look ye what ways the devil has to take
this same assurance and knowledge of our happiness after
death from us, to make us stagger at it and doubt, that so
w^e might look the less after it. We might answer him now,
as Christ did, Avith another place of Scripture, and tell him
it is written otherwise in twenty places. But we say that
Job spake as a natural man there that was overgone Avitli
sorrow " ; and therefore he might have leave to express him-
self with a little passion more than ordinary. But do you
Jobl9. 25. know Avhat he said afterwards? 'I know,^ says he, 'that
my Redeemer liveth / there he was of another mind, he
knew it just as St. Paul says here.]
We 'know^ it, indeed our reason can hardly othenvise
judge of a man, but that he is utterly nndone when he dies,
and cannot see how it is possible for a dead man to rise
Joh. 3. 'i. again, no more than Nicodemus could, how a live man should
be born again. And therefore when St. Paul came among
the philosophers at Athens, and talked to them of the resur-
Acts 17. rection, and of the life to come, they held him for a mad-
^' ■ man ; all their learning Avas against it, and they could by
no means perceive Iioav it should be. But Ave, which haAC
Col. 2. 8. learned Christ, must not be deceived through vain philo-
sophy ; for Ave have a most undoubted assurance of it from
the Spirit of God. Christ can tell Nicodemus hoAv a man shall
be born again ; and St. Paul can tell us here how, after death,
we shall be sure to live again eternally in the heavens.
This then, before we can go any further, must be the first
thing, for us to be assm-ed that there is glory for us after
death ; for if Ave have not this assurance and knowledge first,
it will be vain to go on and talk of any thing else. Nay, if
we be ignorant of this, it Avill go hard Avitli us, Avhensoever
our turn shall come; for death Avill come upon us like a
iieb. rj.i9. mighty storm at sea, and if we want the anchor of hope, this
knoA\dedge here, to hold us fast, then avoc Avorth om' case !
Ave shall be tossed, we knoAV not whither, so that Avhen we
are gone and put in om' graves, they may Avrite upon us as
" Loquitur .lol)jiixta naturam. Re- Dei opus per Cluistum. Poli Synop. in
surrectio autem non est naturae, sed locum.
The body is the soul's prison-house. 35
tliat perplexed knight of Arragon appointed to be \Mitlcn
upon his tomb, in great letters, ' I die/ says he, ' against my
Avill, and I know not Avhither I go ;' or, as Titus " the Em-
peror, ' Alas,^ said he, ' I must die, and I know not why.
Wc shall be a hundred Avays perplexed, and if we know not
this, we shall not know what to do with ourselves for very
distraction. But now if we can get this full assiu'ance, that
St. Paul here had, and come to know beforehand what ad-
A-antage death is to us, we shall be so far from being afraid
of it, or perplexed Avhen it comes, that Ave shall throAV our-
selves into the arms of it, and, like the tired labourer, be
glad Avhen Ave can come out of the field and repose ourselves
in the bed of rest.
(1.) Now I come to the tAvo descriptions. The first is of
om* bodies as they are here : the next is of them as they are
hereafter. Ye shall see Avhat poor things they are here, and
Avhat glorious bodies they shall be there, and all in very fcAV
Avords, for I Avill not, I cannot, stand to enlarge much upon
either.
' If our earthly house. ^ A house, first, Avhere avc have
somcAvhat to set up Avithal yet, indeed our body is the house
of the soul 1', Avhere it lodges. But if you look Avhat ill en-
tertainment it has in it, you Avill say it has but an ill lodging
of it. For as long as our souls are there, they are lodged
Avith a Avitness, lodged no better than as prisoners are lodged,
shut and pent up so that they cannot have their oavu liberty.
Ye see it defiles the soul as soon as ever it gets into it, cor-
rupts and almost kills it, as soon as ever it is sent to harbour
there, Avith original sin : and then when it is Avashed and all
made clean again by baptism, yet ere long the house gets
soiled and infects the soul, as long as ever it dAvells there. And
therefore the ancients were Avont to call it the grave, and the
sepulchre, and the prison-house of the soul, the house of
bondage 'J. This is the house that St. Paul speaks on here.
An ill beginning, you see.
" The editor has been unable to Suicer, Thesaur. ii. 1210.
trace the incident here mentioned to i Passages in which the body is
any authority. styled the grave, and the prison-house
P 2a)/ia oUia ^vxvs, Chrysost. Horn. of the soul, are collected by Suicer,
69. in S. Matth. Euseb. Praep. Evang. Thes. ii. 1212.
1. vii. p. 186. fol. Par. 1544, cited by
D 2
36 The body an 'earthly' house.
S E R M. (2.) Yet were it some goodly house, some stately, com-
rr
pactcd building, that were reared up with costly stones about
it, it might somewhat help the matter; but this house is
built up of nothing but earth and mud, the most base
materials that go to any building. Our 'earthly' house.
That is the second point in the text. And if it be no better,
it is a goodh' thing, sure, that we should make so much of it
as we do, whereby it seems we would fain seem to the world
to be of a little better mould than God made us on ; but
when we have done what Ave can Avith all the bravery and
cost that we can bestow upon ourselves, yet earth we are, and
earth we must be again, whether we will or no. We set a
fair outside on it, saith St. Bernard'", but if Ave look to see
what is within us, we shall find that we are but so many
sacks of excrements, fit meat for the worms of the earth to
diet on ; like as Clemens Alexandrinus* tells us of the
Egyptian temples, fair and sumptuous without, and set forth
with all kind of majesty and curious ornaments, but within
nothing but some ugly serpents, cats, and crocodiles, to
behold. And so pull but this same skin off" here, that makes
us look so fair to the eye, and for the rest, the best of us are
nothing else but a lump of clay, somewhat handsomely
framed and prettily set together, and that is all. We make
much ado with ourselves, as if we Avere some delicate
creatures : and this earth that Ave carrv about Avith us must
be gilded ov^er, as if there were no such matter. But Avhen
all is done, we shall find St. Paul's words here true, that
earth and mud we are ; and bring us the most comely feature
you can find among a million, it is but a house of clay, and
such like matter, make the best of it. [Which that young
German* understood verA^ Avell, that Avould never suffer his
"■ Nihil aliud est homo quam sperma foetidum, saccus stercorum, cibus vermium.
Post homincm vermis, post vermem foetor et horror ;
Sic in lion hoiiiinem vertitur omiiis homo.
S. Beriiardi Meditatioiics, cap. 3. edit. Colon. 1637.
* See Pnc'dagog. 1. iii. c. ii. edit. letlialom iiicidissct, a projiiiiquis suis
Potter, i. 252. fol. Oxon. 1715. exorari non potiiit ut siiam elHgicm vel
' Alisena; in Temijlo Afrano monu- pictain vel sculptam posteritati rclin-
meiituiTi cujusdam iiobilis adolescentis queret; taiitum hoc precibns illorum
ex Schleinizioruin faniilia (nisi fallor) concessit, ut postquam terra mandatus
oriundi etiamimm hodie videre licet. esset, paucos post dies sepulchrum
Perhibebatur adolescens ille omnium apcrirent, et qua forma cadaver snum
suae aetatis fuissc ))ulcherrimus, sed invcnirent, eadem depingi curarent.
cum in ipso setatis flore in inorbuin Hoc cum esset factum, iuvenerunt fa-
The body a transitory house. 37
picture to be drawn in liis life-time, but bade his friends,
that M-ere so importunate to liave it, take him out of his
grave when he was dead, aud then draw him as they foinid
him; which some, for the love they bare him, would
needs do too. But they found him in such a case as they
had no heart to take his picture then, but laid him down
again, as fast as they could, and found it true which Ecclesi-
asticus saith, That when man dietli he becomes a corrupted
earth, and the inheritance of serpents. So you see there is
no great pleasm-e to be taken in these houses of clay ; they
are but poor mean things, God wot ! that the world should
so trim them up, and set up their rest on them, as they do"J .
And this is the second step to oiu* preferment here ; ye see
we are fairly holpen up with it ; our bodies ai"e but earthly
houses.
(3.) Now an earthly house would do somewhat yet, and
we might perhaps make a shift withal, if it were well and
strongly built, if it were a steady house, though it had not
so much beauty in it, yet we would go near to make it serve
the tiu'n. But this is a house that has no firmness, no
foundation, nor no stabihty in it at all ; it is but ' a taber-
nacle,^ saith the text, ' our earthly house of this tabernacle /
that is the third thing. Now we are worse than we were
before, for there was some hope in an earthly house, that it
might have stood still, and remained a sufficient time for us
in one place. But a tabernacle is a flitting thing, set up in an
hour' to-day, and taken down again in less time to-morrow, if
it will last so long, for perhaps a blast of wind may come and
puff it down to-day, and so all is spoilt. See then, what
this life of ours is ; it is here compared to a travelling tent,
travellers we are only and pilgrims upon the earth, carrying
about our bodies but hke tents and tabernacles, to set down
and take up again after a night over ; and there an end with
them. "Wherefore a wonder it is to see what the world
means, to bestow such a deal of care and cost upon a thing
that flits away from us every day, and perhaps must be taken
ciem ejus semiconsumtam a vermibiis, in sacello gentiliiioillius templi inter ar-
et pluics serpentes circa diapliragnia et matas majoruniet gentiliumstatuascon-
spinain dorsi exstantes. Jusseruut spicitur. Joh. Gerhardi Locc. Theolog.
igitur ejus effigiem, sicut inveneraut, xvii. 82. edit. Cottae, 4to. Tubing. 1777.
lapidi incidi, quod monumentum adhuc " Marked for omission.
38 The bochj is to be dissolved,
S E R M. down to-morrow. Docs any man do so with his tabernacle ?
'- — he does not keep such a dressing up of that^ but makes
account to take it up again ere long, and get him gone.
Then if we set [it] up for many years, and think our bodies
like our barns, and this tabernacle like the tower of Babel,
that shall never fail, perhaps this night they may be taken
from us, and He that dwells in heaven will but laugh us to
scorn at the last.
(4.) Perhaps they may be taken down? nay, be sure it
shall, says the text, there is no hope on't, but it must be dis-
solved ; ' When this earthly tabernacle is dissolved,^ that is
the fourth thing. "SVc shall not have it stand up for ever ;
but build it as carefully as we can, there must come a disso-
lution of it ; and fence it about with all the strength that our
wealth can afford, or all the devices that our wits can imagine,
yet all will not do ; it must, and will, at the last fall asunder
of itself. For I pray tell me, Avhere are all they now that
promised to themselves such eternity, how their houses
should never fail, they that led the world in a string, and at
whose beck both men and beasts did bow, that subdued
kingdom upon kingdom, that called their lands after their
own names, and thought that their dwelling-places should
Ps. 49. 11. endiu'C from one generation to another, as David speaks.
Ps. 49. 10. ' For we see,' says he, 'that wise men also die and perish
together, as well as the ignorant and foohsli, and leave their
riches for others.' Indeed, we use to flatter the great men of
the world with the titles of In-s-incible Potentates, and pre-
sently after comes an ague and shakes them all to pieces.
They wrote the Emperors, Semper Aiu/usti, men that should
live for ever ; and within an hour after some of them were
laid flat along in their graves. This is that we call eternal
and everliving honour. Alas ! how soon it dies, how soon
dissolved, and we are gone.
(5.) Again: 'when it shall be dissolved,' saith St. Paul;
he docs not tell us when, (for that is uncertain,) that we
might be at all times prepared ; perhaps it may be to-day,
before to-morrow, in the first or second watch, we know
not when ; and when we rise in the morning, we can hardly
make the proverb good that we are up for all d&j. For God
knows, we may be down again, six feet in the earth before
and yet to he rebuilt. 39
tbe sun be seven hours high in heaven. But whensoever it
is, though wc know not when it will be, yet be sure it will
be one time or other. The general tide wafts all to the shore,
some sooner, some later, but all at last^'. This tabernacle
must be dissolved,
(G.) And yet this for our comfort; it shall but be ^dis-
solved,' says the text, and no more : it shall not be utterly
destroyed and brought to nothing. All the power that death
has of us is but to take our tabernacle to pieces, to dissolve
the body only, and loosen one part from another; but to
destroy it quite, that is beyond her power. It takes it
asunder indeed, and that is no great matter, for we shall get
by the bargain ; death does but unmake us that God may
come and make us up better again; Who, when He shall
gather together what death has dissolved, of a corruptible
body will frame us a glorious body, and of a flitting taber-
nacle will set us up a royal building, eternal in the heavens.
And thus by this dissolution here there is more pleasure done
us than we think of. For among ourselves, when we see our
houses are weak, and brittle, and every day ready to fall
about our ears, we use to pull them down, that we may take
the materials and build them up fairer and stronger again.
This does God do for us ; our bodies being such w^eak and
unstable tabernacles as they are. He does but suffer death to
dissolve and pull them down, that He may take the building
of them up again into His own hands ; and of poor earthly
houses, build us heavenly mansions, and make us glorious
bodies that shall continue for evermore.
II. And so I come to the second part of the text, the
description of the life to come, Avhich being a picture too
glorious for our weak eyes to behold, and seeing we can per-
ceive nothing of it but as through a glass and very darkly, as
the Apostle speaks, we shall give you but a ghmpse of it, and i Cor. 13.
pass it over the faster.
(1.) When this tabernacle is dissolved, we shall have a
' Homo moriturus non magis aut et casus fortuitiis siibito et ex insperato
conqueri debet, si ad mortem pervenit, ad ilium portiim perducit, dolere noii
quam navigaiis si ad portum ad queni debet homo, sed potius cum patientia
navigabat, celerius quam credit pertin- tolerare. Idiot, de Contempl. mortis,
git. Est enim mors portus ad quem I. v. c. 8. ap. Bibl. Patr. Latin, tom.
continue navigamus ; ct ideo si ventus x. p. 22.
12.
40 And rebuilt by God Himself,
s E R M. building. So then death is but the passage and the door
that let us out from a poor silly cottage, ready to tumble
upon our heads, to a fair, spacious palace, whereof we shall
fear no dissolution. And if ye would know what manner of
building it is, that you may see the difference betwixt it and
Rev. 21. ours, St. John will tell you. A building it is, says he, that
■to
hath the walls of jasper, and the whole stnicture within of
pure gold, that looks as clear as crystal, (if ye be in love
with such things, there they are for yovi,) and whose foundations
are garnished with all manner of precious stones, and whose
gates are of the purest pearl ; and all those shining with the
glory of God about them. We should put out our eyes to
look any further, and therefore we will content ourselves
with this. But look you what a change here is ; our own
a poor despised tabernacle, a tent that is but holden up with
a few sticks, not built at all ; and this, a glorious compacted
structure, as will amaze every one to behold the majesty
of it.
(2.) This is but the beginning of our happiness, we shall
have that, and we shall have God with it too, ' a building of
God.^ It is that which He has prepared for Himself of old,
and that will double our happiness, when we shall not be
left alone there, but admitted even into His own glorious
Ps. 16. 11. presence, where are pleasures for evermore, as David speaks.
(3.) And ' a building not made with hands.' For what
one hand makes, another may pull down again, and there-
fore oui' tabernacles, a few hands can set them up in an hour,
and one hand can pull them down again in a moment. But
that we may know that all the strength of the world, put all
their hands together, as we use to say, shall never dissolve
this building, therefore the text tells us it is made without
hands, made even by the power of God, Who will strengthen
Dan. 2. 31-. it for cvcr. ' I saw,' says the king of Babel, in Daniel, ' a stone
cut out of a rock, without hands ;' that was the figure of
Christ's Bod}^, which was made Avithout the help of man, by
the power of God Himself, as our glorious bodies shall he
made hereafter, when they shall be like unto His.
(4.) And tlierefore, fourthly, it followeth that it shall be
an eternal building, not like an unstable tent, a house here
that had no abiding, for this body passeth away, saitli the
and rebuilt in the heavens. 41
Apostle; but to nuike amends for all hibour here, this second iC()r.7.2i.
buikling shall be a resting-place for ever, a house that shall '•^"''•''^•'''•
never be flitting away, but one that will last unto all eternity;
nor wind nor weather shall hurt it, it will be su])ject to no
change, for eternity is ever one and the same ; and therefore
when wc have got this building once, let hell and death
roar never so fast, we shall not need to fear a dissolution any
more.
(5.) And eternal 'in the heavens;' that is the last cir-
cumstance, which is the last of all, and makes up our fill of
felicit}'. "When we are to rear up a building, specially if it
be a fail" one, we use to stand as much upon the situation of
it as upon the building itself. Noav, if ye would choose a place
to set it in, sure heaven is the best place that can be wished
for. The earth, that' wearies and dulls us, and no seat there
to be found but has some annoyance or other. But in heaven
wc shall desire nothing which we shall not have, even God
Himself for our prospect, Whose face we shall behold for
ever, and the armies of regal Angels for our neighbours
about us, the goodly fellowship of the Prophets, and the
glorious company of the Apostles continually Avith harps and
viols in their hands to sing songs of joy and melody with us
to Him That sits upon the throne for evermore. Vs\\o would
not:* desire to dwell in such a place, where we shall live like
kings and like the Angels of heaven.
And therefore Ate sigh and groan for it, saith St. Paul,
which is the last thing of all, Propter hoc ingemiscimus. As
David in the Psalms, ' My soul is athirst for the living God, Ps. 42. 2.
O when shall I appear before the presence of God.' And as
the Apostle in another place, '1 desire to be dissolved and Phil. 1.23.
to be with Christ.' And you see what manner a desire it
is ; he sighs and groans for it, and will be glad he can have
it so too. The kingdom of heaven comes not with such cold
wishes as wq use commonly to send out for it, say but one,
Miserere mei, or ' Christ have mercy upon me,' when we are
a-dying, and then think an Angel will come down and carry
us fair and softly upon his wings to eternal tabernacles. No,
says our Saviour, you must not look for it. The kingdom of
heaven is got by violence ; it will cost us many a deep groan Mat. ii.
and sob before we can get to it, for it is a very narrow and ~' _ , ,
° - Mat. (.14.
42 Exhortation to fix the ajfections
s E R M. straight way thither, and we must thrust and labour hard ere
• — ^^ — we shall get through it, What^ do we think the kingdom of
Lu. 17. 20. God comes by observation and by sitting still? no; if ye
would get into a place that is kept so close, you must do as
men use to do at such a time ; strive and press forward till
you groan again, till a man's bod}^ l)e all of a sweat for it,
and then ye may get in ; and when we are in we shall never
sigh nor groan after; though we sigh now, we shall laugh
then our fill. This is then that which St. Paul would com-
mend unto us, that while we live here in this miserable
' a yearn- world, OUT souls would liavc an earning and a longing after
"'° the joys of the next ; and if we think what and how unspeak-
able they are, we cannot choose but do it.
Now, whatsoever we do, let us be sure we turn not our
sighs the wrong way, and instead of sighing after heaven,
set ourselves a-sighing after this life, [as if any joy were to be
found here, for alas ! you see here is nothing but misery and
vanity, and therefore if we sigh for any thing here, it should
be to be rid of that ; but for any thing that should content
us, alas ! here is nothing. If we go about to seek for con-
tent here, we shall have an Angel come to tell us, as he told
Lu. 24. 5. jNIary, that sought Christ in a grave when He was risen,
' Wliy seek you the living among the dead ? ' And why sigh
we after pleasure in a place of misery, or for rest in a place
.Tlv. c. 1 L of trouble ? Indeed, we cry ' peace, peace,^ here like false pro-
phets, Avhen there is no such matter as peace in this world.
Where is it then? Why, the true peace is that which our
death and dissolution brings ns, to translate our vile bodies
from earth into glorious mansions in heaven. And therefore
lest we should doubt of it, St. John was commanded to write
iicv. 1 !. it for a certainty, ' Write from henceforth, that blessed are
the dead, for they rest from theu' labours •' mark it, they rest
from henceforth, that is, from their death. They did not rest
before then, for there are nothing but cares, and troubles,
and sorrows here, when all is done.
And therefore to msike an end of all, since there is no
true rest, nor joy, to be had here, let us sigh and seek after
it where it is ; where this blessed sister of ours hath sought
and sighed after it, and now found it, even in the kingdom
of heaven. And when we arc come thither after her, I shall
V6
on the khu/doni of heaven. 43
tell you one thing, wc sliiill repent us nothing, but tliut we
came there no sooner; and when we shall compare this
flitting tabernacle of ours to that eternal building there, we
shall cry out with St. Peter, ' It is good for us to be here/ And Mat. 17.1.
we shall be as loath to look back upon the earth, as Lot was
to look back upon Sodom, or Moses to the land of Egypt ;
while Ave shall consider ourselves to be delivered from the
house of bondage, and brought into a land where at God's
right haud are pleasures for evermore.]
To these everlasting joys and pleasures, in houses not made
Avith hands, but eternal in the heavens, for which Ave daily
sigh and groan, God for His mercy vouchsafe to bring us ;
that we Avith this our sister and all others departed in the
faith of Christ, may haA^e our perfect consummation there
in soul and body. And He bring it to pass for us, That,
by His death, hath purchased life for us, Christ Jesus, the
righteous. To Whom, &C.''
* Instead of tliis passnge enclosed any thing here deserve a groan. Groans
within brackets, the following one is and sighs are to be kept for heaven,
substituted .... 'all the world is not where true joys are only to be foiuid.
worth a sigh, nor does the loss of And so I have done with the text'
SERMON III.
PREACIItD AT PATCIIET NEAR WINDSOR, ON THE SECOND SUNDAY AFTER
EPIPHANY, A.D. MDCXXIV ; AT THE MARRIAGE OF MH. ABRAHAM DE
EAUNE AND MRS. MARY WHEELER".
St. Johm ii. 1, 2.
And the third day there was a marriage in Cana of Galilee ;
and the Mother of Jesus ivas there :
And Jesus was also called, and His disciples, unto the marriage.
s E R II. It is a marriage day with us, and it is a marriage day
LLl with the text ; a marriage appointed you, whom it concerns,
I doubt not by the care and providence of God ; a text ap-
pointed me by the care and order of the Church, for you see
how it falls out to be that portion of Scriptiu-e here which
the Church hath allotted to be universally read for the Gospel
of this very day''. The Gospel of the Sunday is, or should
be, the theme of all our sermons through the revolution of
the whole year. And this day is, or may be thought at least,
the fittest of all other days of the year to celebrate a marriage
on, it being the very day wherein Christ celebrated one Him-
self, with His own presence at it.
The choice of this day then, for your purpose, hath saved
me the choice of a text for mine, for it hath given me one
here ready to my hand, while the Church's intention met
Piov. 15. both so happily together. And it being Solomon's rule that
^^- men should speak their words as near as might be in season,
Heb. 3. i;3. and while it is called to-day, as St. Paul speaks; sm'e if ever
» In IGJl tl;e manor of Datchef, (Ic- appears from a pedigree of the "SVheclcr
scribed as having formerly been parcel family contained in the Visitation of
of the possessions of the castle and Bucks in A.D. 1G39. (Harl.MS. 1102,
honour of V/indsor; and the manor of fol. 51.) that this Mary was the fifth
DatchctSt.Helen'SjWhich had belonged daughter of Sir Edmoiid "Wheeler of
to the Priory of St. Helen's, and had Rideing Court, county of Bucks, knight,
been afterwards annexed to the honour by Elizabeth daughter and heiress of
of Windsor, were granted by Cliarles I. Richard Hanbcriy of London, and that
to Sir Charles II;irbord and otheis, by Abraham Delane, to whom she was
whom they were conveyed to Sir W. married, was of the highly respectable
Wheeler, in whose family the estate family of Delane of Sharstcde, in the
continued till KiSl. In the parisli county of Kent.
church are many monuments of tlie •* St. .John ii. 1 — 11. is the passage
family of Wheeler. See Lyson's Magna of Scrijiture appointed for the Gospel
Bri'aimia, Tiuckingliamshire, p. 518. It of the day.
The different Epiphanies of our Lord. 45
^^■e shall keep his rule, us we shall keep it to-day, and speak
of opus diei in die suo, bring the day and the work of the day
together ; for he that runs may read some liappy correspond-
ence between the work of this day, and the words of this
text ; that at least for the text^s sake, (however the sermon
proves,) for the text's sake, and for the Gospel's sake 3"0u
may say, as they seem, sicut audivinius, sic etiam vidimus, as Ts. is. 8.
we have heard so have we seen, and as we have seen so have
we heard here in the house of oiu* God.
The text then being thus fixed to the present occasion,
before we proceed to that business, it would be suited in the
Avords to the present time too, according to the revolution of
the year ; for whether we had had a marriage here to-day or
no, we should have had the same Service, the same Sunday,
the same Gospel, and, if a sermon, the same text. How-
soever, the second Sunday after the Epiphany would have
come and gone for all that ; and this Gospel must have been
read upon it : and we must have a care to observe the order
and solemnity of the Church Service and the Church Sunday,
as well as of any marriage day whatsoever.
You are to know, then, that this is Epiphany time. You
see they are called the Sundaj^s of the Epiphany ; and Epi-
phany time is the time of Manifestation, the time when
Christ was pleased to manifest Himself, and make His glory
known to the world. According to which, the Church hath
suited her office, and fitted us ^vitli a course of service, that
might help to bring into our minds in ordei', the things
themselves, as they were done here by Christ our Saviour
while He was upon the earth.
Thus there were three great and prime manifestations that
He made of Himself. The Church begins with them at
Twelfth Day. The first, that He made to the Gentiles ; and
accordingly propounds to you the Gospel of the star that Mat. 2. 1,
appeared in the East, with the Collect, ' O God, Which didst "''^'^"
manifest Thy only begotten Son to the Gentiles'^.' The next
was the first manifestation we read of which He made of
Himself to the Jews, while He sate with them in the Temple,
and shewed them what He was, even at twelve years of age;
■^ O God, Wlio by the leading of a Son to the Gentiles, mercifully grant,
star, didst manifest Thy only begotten &c. Collect for the Epiphany.
46 Church Services neglected.
s E R M. and accordingly did the Church propound that story for the
'- — Gospel the last Sunday, -nhich Avas the first after the Epi-
scqq" ' pli'iiiy- The third Avas the first manifestation that He made
of Himself to His disciples, who had been called but a little
before, and were now invited with Him to the marriage at
Cana. Answerable whereinito is the Gospel propounded
unto us by the Chui'ch this third day, ' and the third day
there was a marriage in Cana,' so it begins ; and at it, Jesus
' manifested forth His glor^^, and His disciples believed on
Him/ so it ends. There were other miracles wherebv Christ
manifested Himself too, and they have their times hereafter ;
Job. 2. 11. but these w^ere the first, in every kind, as St, John says, ' This
was the beginning of miracles that He did ;' and therefore hath
the Chiu'ch appointed the three first days after His Natinty,
for the solemn memory and anniversary celebration of them.
These things, if they were better heeded by us, and known
to us, than they are, I suppose we should aftect the office and
love the ser^dce of the Church better than we do : while the
ignorance of them makes us esteem of God's solemn service,
so divinely disposed as it is, no otherwise than as if it were a
bare reading of so many lines, to spend aAvay time, as in
some places it is accounted ; or an introduction to usher in
a sermon, and wait upon it like a handmaid upon her mis-
tress, as in others ; while God knows it is the greatest happi-
ness that we. His poor servants, can attain to here on earth,
orderly, and duly, and solemnly, to serve Him as the Angels
do in heaven, that is, day by day to magnify Him, to do Him
lionom- and public homage, to send up prayers, as Angels'^ from
earth, and to receive down blessings, as Angels from heaven %
'' ^AyyfAoLS epyov So^oXojilp &t6i', S. Beinardi Senii. 2. in Vip-. Nat. Do-
irdav TTJ ffTpaTiS. tSiv iirovpaviwv iy iriini, 0pp. 1. 7-iG. edit. oMabill. fol.
TovTO ip-yov, Solaj/ auaneixireiv toj Kti- Par. 1719. Hi sunt cives beatee civi-
(TavTi. Basil, in Ps. xxviii. 0pp. 1. 179. tatis siipernas Hierusalem, quae sursum
i'ol. Parif. 1C18. est mater nostra, . . . ut . . . conforteut
= Ipsi nos Angeli sancti deside- quoque, et moneant, et orationesfilionira
rant; iionne de vermiculis istis et de Tuorumdeferant,etofferautiiiconspeftu
pulvere isto restaurandi sunt muri cce- gloriee majestatis Tuae . . . et solliciti
lestis Hierusalem ? putatis quantum discurrentes inter nos et Te, Doniine,
desiderant cives coelestes iustaurari ci- geniitus nostros et suspiria referentes
vitatis suae ruinas ? quomodo solliciti ad Te, ut impetrent uobis facilem Tuaj
sunt ut veniant lajjidcs vivi, tjui cocedi- benignitatis propitiationem, et lefcrant
fu'cntur cis ? quomodo discurruut medii ad nos desideratam Tu;c gratia,' bcne-
intcr nos et Ueum, fidelissinie portantes dictionem. S. Augustiui (?) Soliloq.
ad Eum geniitus nostros, et Ipsius gra- Opp. vi. .'577. edit. Antv. 1700.
tiam nobis devotissime rcjiortantcs .'
Tlie subject divided. 47
to commemorate His mercies, and to hear Avitli our ears, wliat
our fathers (that is, the priests and ministers of God) shall
tell us, the noble acts that He did, in the old time before us. Ps. 1 1 . i .
Among Avhich, this that the Church hath propounded to-day
for the Gospel, and Avhich I have propounded to-day for my
text, is a chief one; the first noble act, the beginning of
miracles, as St. John says a little forward, that Christ did Jo'"- 2. ii.
after His baptism.
And now the text is suited to the time, both for the
occasion which we have to celebrate, and for the day which
the Church is to celebrate.
It divideth itself into these parts :
The solemnizing of a marriage, ' And there was a mar-
riage,^ the first.
The place where it Avas, ' at Cana,^ the second.
The time when it Avas, ' upon the third day,^ and the third
point too.
The guests that were at it, IMary the Mother of Jesus,
Jesus Himself, and Jesus's disciples, the fourth point.
And lastly, Iioav they came there. They Avere iuAited to
it, 'And Jesus was also called, and His disciples, to the
marriage.'
The end of all will be that we make the same use of it
Avhich they did, and then Ave shall be sure to haA^e the same
benefit which they had, CAcn the presence of Christ and
blessing of Almighty God among us.
Of these then, or of as many of these as the time Avill
suffer us that Ave may speak, to the honour of God's most
Hoh' Name, &c. &c. &c.
I shall desire &c.
'And the third day there Avas a marriage in Cana of
Galilee.'
' There Avas a marriage.' That is the first.
Whose marriage this was, that we cannot tell. They did but^
shoot at rovers, those old friars, that out of an old apocry-
phal gospel Avere Avont to tell us the story ^ Iioav that St. John
f 'To shoot at rovers,' without any 'Vita Jesu Christi' by Ludolphus
particular aim, see Johnson's Diet. de Saxonia, gives us the arguments by
^ The following extract from the which this opinion was supported.
48
The persons who ivere mamed at Cana.
S E R M. the Evan^'elist was the man, and the Virgin INTarv's niece
III . . "
'- was the woman, that were to he married here in Cana, but
that when the feast was done, Christ caHcd away the bride-
groom, and made a disciple of him ; and St. Jerome must be
bi'ought in to make up the case, when, as God knows, there is
no sucli meaning in the Father ^ ; and it seems they forgot
tliat St. John was called long before this time, and was one
of the first disciples that m as called, as he sa3^s himself here.
His disciples were called with Jesus to the marriage. What
could become of them ? curious wits forsooth must be
searching, and lose their wits for their labour. AVhat have
we to do with that which God and His Gospel have not been
pleased to tell us ? It is enough, be the marriage whose soever
Heb. 13. 4. it was, wc are told that marriage is an honourable estate of
Gen. 2. 24. life in all men, a state ordained by God Himself in paradise,
a state without which there can be no society in this world
durable ; and albeit single life be a thing more angelical and
divine ', yet because the replenishing of the earth first 'wdth
Quamvis auleiii dubiiun sit cujus
nuptise fuerunt, tamen nos meditemur
eas fuisse Johannis Evangelistae, sicut
in prologo super Joliannem Hierony-
mus videtur affinnare, quem volentem
niibere Cliristus de imptiis vocavit ; et
extunc Johannes Christo propter mun-
ditiem continentias virginalis magis fa-
miliaris fuit. Hoc etiam videtur ex eo
quod Christus non legitur fuisse in
nuptiis aliis, et per hoc ' Mater Jesu
erat ibi' tanquam in nuptiis sui nepo-
tis. Non enim est verisimile quod
ipsa venisset, nisi nullum sibi atte-
nuisset (?) sicut ivit ad Elizabeth cog-
natam suam, nee legitur in tali casu
ivisse ad aliam. In ipsis ergo nuptiis
doniina nostra fuit non tanquam ex-
tranea invitata, sed tanquam primoge-
nita et dignior inter sorores fuit in
domo sororis quasi in dome sua. Cum
cnim soror ejus ^laria Salome uxor
Zebedaei vellet faccre nuptias filio suo
Johanni, vadens ad dominam nostrani
in Nazareth, quarto a Chana miliario,
intimavit lioc ei, et sic ipsa ante oculos
venit ad pra-parationem nuptiarum.
Unde legitur quod ' Mater ,]esu erat
ibi,' sed de Jesu et discipulis dicitur
quod fuerunt vocati ; qui tamen disci-
puli adluic firmiter non adli;i»rebant,
sed sequebantur gratia familiarilatis,
iwibui cupientes Ejus doctrina. Pars
i. cap. XXV. The reader who is anxious
to j)ursue the investigation of this sub-
ject will find numerous authorities, in
which it is discussed, pointed out by
Wolfius, Curte Phil, in S. Johan. cap.
ii. V. 1.
*" It is admitted by Baronius, A.D.
xxxi. § ."51, that no such passage is
to be found in the writings of Jerome.
It occurs in two ancient prologues pre-
fixed to the Gospel according to St.
Jolm, of which the former is ascribed
to St. Jerome, the other to St. Au-
gustine. Both maj' be found in the
Glossa Ordinaria; (edit. fol. Antw.
1617, tom. V. 1001. 100;!;) the former
is also extant in the Complutensian
Polyglott, and in the works of the
Venerable Beda, (edit. Basil. 1563. iii.
515.) It is there stated that 'Jolian-
nem de nuptiis volentem nubere voca-
vit Dominus.' In the second these
words occur. ' Iste est Johannes,
quem Dominus de fructivaga nuptia-
rum tempestate vocavit.' Thomas
Aquinas (2a 2a; q. 186. a 4), Bona-
ventura, Lyra (who says ' Dicitur
etiam comnumiter quod istas nuptiae
fvierunt Joannis Evangelistae,' edit.
](il7. col. lOl'J), and all the middle
age theologians, adopted this opinion.
' See passages to this effect col-
lected from Uie Fathers, both Greek and
Marriage a re/if/lous rite. 49
goodly inluibitants, and then of heaven with fj;lorious saints,
depended upon the conjunction of man and wife, when tliere
was but a man alone, God made him a woman and a helper Gen. 2. 22.
for him ; a helper for many ends, for the propagation of his
kind, for the education of his children, for the rule of his
servants, for the guiding of his estate ; and therefore man
and woman, being to join themselves for such pui-jioses, they
had need have some insoluble knot to tie them together, and
that is the bond of matrimony, Avhich, when God hath tied,
no man can unloose again. This is the state that is here
spoken of; that you here are to undertake ; a state that hath
been ever more or less esteemed of as a thing sacred and re-
ligious ; the title which the heathens give it is holy, rov^
lepov<; ydfiovi, saitli Dionysius Halicarnassus '^, and the rites
wherewith these Jews here did solemnize it in their rituals,
as in ours, are called ' Sancta '.'
For the time. ' The third day there was a marriage.'
AMiat this third day was, is needless to let you know,
whether the third day of the week, or the third day after
His baptism "" ; but be it as it was, a fit time it was for
Christ to be there, and to manifest Himself at it. Christ
chose this time to be at a marriage " ; had it been at some
other time, perhaps He would not have been there ; but this
w^as a fit time both to make good the testimony of John
Baptist, and to shew wherefore He came into the world.
St. John Baptist had told wonderful things of Him but a
few days since, and no doubt but the people wondered what
manner of person He should be, That should take away the
sins of the world. A wonder lasts not long, yet tliree days
at least it useth to tarry °, that they might have proof there-
fore of St. John Baptist's testimony in time. The third day,
Latin, by Suicer, Thesaur. in voce tlie same treatise in Ugolini's Thes.
irapQivia ; Bellarm. de Monachis, 1. ii. Antiq. Sacr. torn. iii. col. ccccxvii.
c. 28. vol. 1. col. 166-1-. ed. Ingolst. '" The different opinions held upon
1586; and Gerh. Loc. Theolog. xvi. this subject, are collected and examined
25. edit. Cottse. by Maldonat, in his Commentary upon
^ . . . ^KaKovv 5e rovs Upovs oi iraXaioi the passage.
ydjxovs "PoiixaiKrj Trpoa-nyopia.- wepLXafi- " The opinions of the Fathers upon
^dvovTes ^appuKta. Dion. Halic. edit. this subject also may be seen in the
Huds. i. 92. author just cited, and also in Barradii
' On the religious character of the Harm. ii. 135.
marriage rites of the Jews, see God- " Erasm. Adag. Chil. ii. Cent. v.
■wyti's Moses and Aaron, p. 232. edit. prov. 42.
lf)85. and the notes of Hottinger to
COSIN. j;
50 Proper seasons for marriages.
s E R M. as there fell a marriage upon it, not without God's provi-
:— deuce came Christ to work a miracle and confirm betimes
what St. John had said of Him, that the people might per-
ceive He had no false prophet to His forerunner.
And the third day, (that is, presentl}'^ after,) because
Christ chose to do His beginning of miracles at a marriage,
it was to tell us wherefore He came, to unite Himself to His
Chui'ch, and make a heavenly marriage, &c.
Now as Christ chose His time, and as the Church hath
chose this time to propound the story of this mai'riage, so
must we choose our times for it too; we have no mkacles to
work, but we have times to observe ; there is a time for all
Eccl. 3. things, a time to laugh and a time to weep. This is no
,V, "• ,jg weeping time; it is a time of joy, it butts ^ upon Christmas
adjoins, time, it is the third day since we began to celebrate the nati-
vity of Christ, and a marriage time fits well withal. A time
of mourning would not have done so well ; and had Christ
met with a marriage as He had been going to the wilderness
to fast forty days, surely He would never have tru^ned into
it; but now when His time of fasting was done He went to a
marriage. There is an order of the Church which forbids
the solemnizing of marriages at certain times in the year p ;
not that it is unlawful at any time, but that it is not ex-
pedient at some. For duties belonging to marriage and
mirth, and offices appertaining to penance and sorrow, are
Eccl. 3. things altogether unsuitable ; all the Prophets and all the
j'cJr 7*5 Apostles tell us as much. And therefore as we might well
think it a marvellous absui'd thing to see in a church a
solemn weddiug kept upon a pubUc and solemn day of
fasting, so likewise our predecessors thought it fit to restrain
tlie Hberty of marriages during the time which was ap-
pointed either for preparation unto, or for exercise of general
humiliation in prayer, and fasting, and weeping for oiu' sins
upou some days, which we commit all the days of our life,
and perhaps should never think of any sorrow for them, had
not the Chiu'ch ordained such times to moan and lead us
thereunto : such are the times of Advent, of Lent, of Ember
times, and the hke ^ ; for if all times were open, we should,
P Biiigliam, Orig. Eccl. xxii. ii. § 14. ami Gcrh. Loc. Com. Theolog. xv. 470.
1 See Bingham, as quoted above, Bellann. de Matrim. cap. 31.
The guests invited. 51
&c. it is enough that some are open then^ and it will be the
greater commendation for you then, and the less trouble to
your minds, that you are come hither in a due time to cele-
brate your marriage, even in a time of joy, when Christ
came to this, without breaking any order or godly discipline
of the Church.
For the place, in Cana of Galilee, we shall not need to say
much ; it was in that very place whereabout John Baptist
was a-baptizing and preaching to the people of Christ ; that
so in the same place his doctrine might be confirmed, and
the people's faith strengthened. The place which you have
chosen is in your father's house, as Jacob was married to his Gen. 29,
wife in Laban's, her father's and her mother's own home ;* '
which will be a joy to them that see it, and a better con-
fii'ming of their hope for God's blessing upon you.
Now for the guests; ^And the INIother of Jesus was
there.' Clandestine and stolen marriages, whereat nobody
might be present, were ever odious to God and men; this
was none of them. It was the glory of our predecessors
solemnly to celebrate their marriages, and to have as many
witnesses at them as they could get ' ; and all to a good end ;
that they might pray, and testify how religiously the espoused
gave then' faith one to the other, to remain inviolable to
their lives' end; that if they kept it so, it might be a joy to
them; if they brake it, so many witnesses might rise up
against them.
Witnesses and guests in this time, then, might be many ;
we are to sjieak of them that were extraordinary only ; for it
was St. John's intent, by naming those more than any other,
to have us take some especial heed of them. Here is first,
the Mother of Jesus. Mary was a woman that had found
grace and favour with God, a woman that was saluted from
heaven with an Angel, one whom all generations were to call Lu. 1. 28,
' blessed,' who was then a saint on earth, who is now a most 'lu ] 4^
glorious saint in heaven. Sure they must needs think some
great blessing would come upon the marriage, the rather by
ha\dng her there. The custom was then to call grave
' See Bingham, Orig. Eccl. xxii. iv. note on the word ' Friend,' in the
§ 1. and § 3 ; Gerh. Loc. Com. xv. Rubric to the Marriage Service.
463 ; Nicholls on the Common Prayer,
E 2
52 The Virgin one of the guests.
s E R M. matrons to the wedding of young people^ that so they might
'- — have a pattern of modesty, and gravity, and godhness, and
honesty, for them to imitate all their life after. Now as the
world goes in our days, these customs are almost forgotten ;
for we use to call the youth of the parish and the minstrels
of the countrj'^ ; music and melody are the two matrons we
look after ; Venus for the Virgins, and Bacchus for Christ.
A sad difference ! as if men and women meant to purchase
jollity enough for one day of their marriage, and repentance
enough for all the daj^s of their life after. This is a fashion
for gentiles ; the people of the nations may frisk, vos autem
non sic, it must not, and I am glad it is not like to be so
with you, who (God be thanked) have been better taught.
' And Mary the Mother of Jesus was there.^ Her being
there commended the marriage as a thing not wantonly, or
lightly, or suddenly undertaken, (as God knows they are too
often so with us,) but solemnly and deliberately in the fear
of God% as they were then, as they ought to be now, accord-
ing to order, as our Church book teacheth us to speak.
Had it been otherwise, surely she would never have been
there ; but being so, and her being at it, it brought on a
better guest than she was ; which is the next thing, ' And
Jesus was also called to the marriage.'
I have wondered often why Mary should be named first,
and Jesus after her ; Avhy not Jesus before Mary ? and I find
it is for nothing else but to tell us that unless INIary had
been there first, Jesus would never have come thither.
Mary's being there made it a solemn and a grave meeting ;
to such a meeting Christ would come ; had it been without
Mary, that is, without gravity and sobriety. He would have
turned another way, and never have vouchsafed His presence
at it. And the only reason why Christ comes to no more of
our Aveddings than He does, — as you see by the effect of
most on them, — is because we invite not His Mother first,
that is, sobriety and temperance, and a holy religious intent
to be joined together now, to live together hereafter in the
fear of God, and keeping of His commandments. But for-
sooth, all our thoughts must be taken up with the pleasure
' ' Reverently, discreetly, advisedly, for the solemnization of matrimony,
soberly, and in the fear of God.' Order
Money regarded more than virtue. 53
jvnd jollity that we shall now come to enjoy, with the honour
and worship that shall now be done us, over that we had
before ; with the wealth that we shall wallow in, especially
if the portion and the jointiu'e be any thing great ; and
therefore Christ seldom or never comes among us at such
times.
For He hath sent His Mother before Himself, and if she
finds the place fit for her, then good. He will come after ; if
otherwise, there is no place for Him. He would have our
thoughts taken up Avitli a wife^s virtues, when we marry one,
and not with her visage ; with her goodness that she brings,
and not with her goods*: the worst wives having many times
the best portions, and the best wives (such a one as Esther Esth. 2. 7.
was) having oft times none at all. Marry, the world runs
now for wives as Judas ran to the High-Priests for money,
with quantum dabis, what will ye give ? no matter what she Mat. 26.
hath besides, though both would do well together, howsoever. '^'
And if the maiden chance to say, with Peter, aurum et argen- Acts 3. 6.
turn non est mihi, ' gold and silver have I none, but such as
I have shall be yours,^ let her be as obedient as ever Sarah
was, as devout as Anna, as loving as Rebecca, as virtuous as
the Virgin Mary, — yet all shall be esteemed as nothing, qua-
renda pecunia primum est^\ other things may mend it, but
money makes the match. It will hardly Ije believed, if we
tell the world that money commonly mars it ; but believe it
or not, that which makes it good, is goodness ; and to have
the Mother of Jesus, and the blessing of Jesus with it, is
worth the greatest dowiy that now-a-days is given ; to want
them, be the dowrj^ what it will be, be the beauty of the
maid, the credit of her house, the greatness of her stock,
never so great, all will be but vanity, and turn to vexation of
spirit. A woman is like a ship, saith Solomon ; she is like a Prov. 31.
ship indeed; if she hath not gravity to balance her, and dis- ^^"
cretion to guide her, she flies up and down without a pilot ;
inconstant, light-headed and vain ; now she loves, and anon
she hates ; now she obeys, and anon she scorns ; gentle to-
' Si uxorari oportet, ... sit amor stola Valerii ad Ruffinum de uxore non
in causa, non census ; et faciem uxoris ducenda. Inter Epp. S. Hieronymi,
eligas non vestem, et animum non au- p. 207. edit. Antv. 1.579.
rum, et tibi nubat uxor nou dos, Epi- " Horat. Ep. i. 1. 53.
54 The marriage why hallowed
s E R M. day, and rough to-morrow ; she goes by tides and all her
'■ — goodness takes her by fits, like the good days of a double
tertian"; and though she seems good for seven days at first,
she makes amends and is naught seven years after ; so that,
Judg. 11. as it was said of JephthaVs daughter, that she went out to
' ■ bewail the days of her virginity, may be said in truth of
many men's daughters. For if they bring not more of
Mary and Jesus with them than of other company, and
more of their virtues than of other endowments, they, or
their husbands, may go out and bewail the days of their
marriage too, and wish they were set in their single life
again. And what I say of one sex, for equity's sake I say
of the other too.
'And Jesus was also called, with His disciples, to the
marriage.' It may be that they were called out of some
special devotion and faith that they had in Him, that all
things should go well with them, both that day and all their
days after, if they might but be blessed with His presence
once ; for so king David would needs have the Ark of God
1 Chron. into his house, and his house was the better for it ever after :
17. 2o ''6
27! See 13.' fill cl SO Zacchcus reccivcd Christ into his house with joy,
J*" 10 n ^nd salvation was brought unto his house by it.
Lu. 19. 9. ° •' , ,
But whether it were out of faith or confidence m Him, or
no, as yet it was early days with any believers, sure we are it
was out of charity and good affection to Him, neither did
Mat. 10. they lose theii' reward for that. He that receives a prophet
in the name of a prophet, shall have a prophet's reward; and
Christ would come when He was called, were it but to com-
mend charity and hospitahty to us, and to tell us how facile
He is of His own goodness ; that be the persons what they
will that call Him, if they do but call upon Him He will
hear, and give them their desire withal ; nay, so full of
goodness, that if they forget to call, He will come and call
and knock Himself, if they will but open to Him, not shut
the doors against Him, they shall have His blessing. Tliat
if any call now ; but for the call of marriage more specially,
because there is more need of Him then, than at any other
time.
* An ague inteiinitting l)ut one day, so tliat there arc two fits in three days.
.Folinson's Diet.
41.
by our Saviour's presence. 55
(1.) For first, they tliat marry are like tlicni that venture at
sea ; they venture their estate, venture their peace, venture
tlieir Uberty ; yea many a two venture their souls too, as
Solomon did with his concubines, and Herod with his i Kings
brother's wife; that if Clmst be not at hand to save them. Mat. 14. 3.
they are ever and anon ready to perish.
(2.) They that marry must commonly leave father and
mother, and sister and brother, and kindi'ed, and a great
deal of other comforts which they were wont to enjoy;
that if Christ were not at hand to be as all these unto
them, most an end it would so fall out, that the latter end
of these people would be worse than the beginning. But
when Christ comes to the marriage, there will be no want
of other company. If thou must forsake thy father's house,
said God to Jacob, be not afraid of that, for E(/o Dominus Gen. 12. i.
tecu7n ero, I will be with thee. It is some comfort yet that
we shall have somebody with us, when we must leave our
wonted acquaintance, and yet here is not every somebody,
but here is Christ Himself, that by His presence here hath
promised His presence and assistance to all them that shall
join themselves and live according to His holy ordinance.
And thev that have Him shall be in Enoch's case, though Gen. 5. 22.
all the Avorld forsake them yet shall they walk with God ;
or in Daniel's, who had none but Michael the archangel to Dan. 10.
help him, there is company enough ; and as Christ, when all ~ *
forsook Him and fled, 'Yet am I not alone, for the Father J0LI6.32.
is Adth Me.' So whatsoever they be put to, yet are they
not alone, for Christ is with them. And though men think
themselves safe enough, as long as they be in their father's
house, yet this, erat Jesus ibi, is worth all : for Isaac was in Gen. 22.
... 10
his father's house, and yet he had like to have lost his life if
God had not been with him ; and Jacob was in his mother's Gen. -^7.
house, and yet the best counsel she coidd give him was to
take to his heels from the fury of Esau ; the Shunamite's 2 Kings
child in his mother's lap, and yet not safe. If God and ' ""
Christ be not with us, nobody is with us ; if They will vouch-
safe Theii* presence, nobody will be against us. A fruitful
Adne shall grow upon the tops of our houses, and ourps. 128. 3.
children shall stand like olive branches round about our
table; which is the happiness, that I wish from this day
56 Marriage a state of imperfection.
s E R M. forwai'd may befall you, as it hath done others of your stock
— ' — before you.
(3.) The married life is so full of troubles, vexations, crosses.
Gen. 3. 16, while (as God made the order at first) the man must sweat
with weariness abroad, and the Avoman wear herself with
sorrow at home ; she to brinp^ forth childi'cn, and he to bring
them up''; and though all their life be spent in some ease,
yet when they grow to age, to be despised of others, to be
lame, and bhnd, and deaf, to have palsies, and gouts, and
agues upon them ; why, if Christ were not by to help them,
and to comfort them with His presence, what joy could they
take in such a state of life that had brought all these miseries
upon them ?
(4.) Last of all ; had not Christ vouchsafed His presence at
this marriage, men might have had cause to doubt, as they
Mat. 19. (iij in the Gospel, whether it were good to marry at all, or
no ; for fijrst. He was a Wrgin Himself, and His Mother, she
was a virgin ; neither He nor she would lead any other lives;
and married life itself seems to be but an imperfect state, the
state of perfection is vii-ginity, so much commended by our
Saviour, so highly esteemed by St. Paul. Besides, those that
thought themselves wise men of old, were little in love with
marriage, insomuch that one said it would be a happy world
if there were no Avomen in it ; as Cato ; and that if thev Avere
out, God Avould come oftener among us than He does^; that
a woman Avas a necessary evil, and that a wise man wovild
never marry one of them^ All Avhich considered, it was
necessary that Christ should confirm the honom^ and honesty
of this estate by His presence, as being a state of Hfe, for all
their discourse, both pleasing and acceptable to God, if it be
undertaken according to His holy Avill and ordinance.
And what greater comfort can there be to any than to
^ Tribulatio autem est in satio nostra non esset absque Diis.'
siispicionibus zeli conjugalis, in pro- Epistola Valerii ad Rufinuni, inter
creanchs filiis atque nutriendis, in ti- 0pp. S. Hicronymi, Epist. 49. edit,
moribusetmojrovibusorbitatis. Quoties Antv. 1579. p. 207. See also L. C.
enim quisquc, cum se connubii vinculis Rhodegini Lect. Antiqq. xiii. l-i. col.
alligaverit, non istis trahitur atque 757. edit. Franc. lC(j(>.
agitatur affectibus. S. August, de ^ A large collection of these passages
Sancta Virgin, c. 16. torn. vi. 254. edit. from the sayings of the ancients may
Bened. fol. Ant. 1700. be seen in the Ilieron. adv. Jovinian. i.
y Ait Cato Uticensis, ' Si al)sque 28, 29. Opp. ii. 161, 162. edit. fol.
focmina posset esse mundus, convcr- Ant. 1578.
Conclusion. 57
know that the state wherein they live is pleasing to Almighty
God, without which confidence every day would be a dismal,
a miserable day unto them.
Then to make an end. If you that are here to be married,
would have all things to succeed well with you, you are to
take this marriage here for a pattern to make yours by. If
wantonness and lightness, with their attendants, be sent
away, and Mary the ^Mother of Jesus be sent for to vou : if
Christ and His disciples be invited to bless your marriage
day now, to guide you in your married life hereafter, Christ
is so gentle and ready to be with you, that He will work
miracles but you shall have a blessing ; it will do you good
all the days of your life, and after this marriage, and this life,
bring you at last to a more lasting marriage with the Lamb,
and a life that shall never fail.
To which He bring us all, Wlio hath purchased the same
for us, Christ Jesus, &c., to Whom, &c.
SERMON IV/
IV,
Matthew iv. 6.
If TJiou be the Son of God, cast Thyself down headlong, for it
is loritten, He shall give His Angels charge over Thee, and
ivith their hands they shall hold Thee up, lest at any time
Thou dash Thy foot against a stone.
[If Thou be the Son of God, cast Thyself down, for it is written, He
shall give His Angels charge concerning Thee ; and in their hands
they shall bear Thee up, lest at any time Thou dash Thy foot against
a stone."]
S E R M. So the devil upon a day tempted Christy so the devil every-
day tempts us, whose whole life is little else but a time of
temptation from our cradle to our grave ; and though many
and various the temptations are which we suffer from him,
yet most an end he works upon us with such as this was, to
make us presume upon God's mercy, make us believe that we
are the sons of God, and then that we may cast ourselves
headlong into what sins we list, that we should be never a
whit the worse for it, but as often as we fell down. He and
His Angels Avould take us up again.
I know we will all confess that this should not be, that
presumption is a high sin ; yet if any such temptation comes,
I know not how it comes about, but for all that, we will pre-
sume to die for it, we will be venturing to have our will, come
of it what will come : and the mischief is, that Ave have no
sense of the deviFs dence in it, or that there comes any devil
to us for the matter.
In which regard, it may do some good to let you see both
liow the de\il deceives you, and how you deceive yourselves ;
" From internal evidence it would See the note at the end of the next
appear that this and the following seriuon.
discourse were written in tlie year 1()25.
»
Division of the subject. 59
how his way is hkc a serpent's way over the stones^ that over
is comej indeed, but a man cannot tell how; that goes so
slyly, and creeps so slow, that a man sees him before he
knows what way he gat in : — and how your way is like the ,
downfal of a rock, or the fearful way from the height of a
pinnacle, where (for all the devil's fair words) there are no
Angels to hold you up, but them that will take you by the
feet, and dash your head against the stones.
And a better way to let you see both the subtilty (as I
say) of his way, and the danger of your own, I cannot take,
than in this place of Scripture, where they are both laid out
to the open view of all, that when you have seen them and
looked upon them, you may (as you use to do in other ways
of danger) decHue them, and come there no more. If any
of you be so presumptuous that he will keep on his old way
still, yet (that which for this time concerns me) I shall have
quitted myself of an office ; and as the man of God told the
kinor, I shall let vou understand where the trains are laid iKiugs20.
° " 22.
for you.
And it will be a good commodity, this, for them that will
use it, to have notice beforehand of an adversary's forces, and
of the manner of his fight ; we shall ward oflF his blows the
better, when they come ; and though his darts be fiery, yet
if we make preparation, they may be quenched, as St. Paul Epli.G. 16.
speaks, and Satan shall not circumvent us.
For the text then ; it is the temptation of the pinnacle, a
temptation that the devil uses to bring men to presumption
and wantonness withal.
It hath three general parts. The first is, the colouring
and oiling of it over, to make it come on the better, by a
pretext of being the son of God : ' If thou be the Son of
God.'
The second is the temptation, and the very fiery dart itself :
Make no more ado, but cast Thyself down headlong.
And the third is the cost which he bestows upon it, to
make it fly and pierce the better, by an allegation of a choice
piece of Scripture, (which is a cost that he bestowed upon
neither of his other temptations,) ' for it is written,' (I have
it here in the Psalms to shew you,) ' He shall give His
Angels charge over Thee, and with their hands they shall
60 The devil tempts to despair.
s E R M. bear Thee up, lest at any time Thou dash Thy foot against a
'- — stone/
These three ; and these three to be the heads, from whence
all other parts of the text, as they shall come in order, and
all the parts of our ensuing discourse, are to floAV. Of these
then, that we may speak that which shall be honourable to
Almighty God, and profitable to oiu-selvcs, I shall desire
you, &c.
THE BIDDING OF THE COMMON PRAYERS.
Pater Noster.
I. 'If Thou be the Son of God/ For the better under-
standing of which words, and what the devil meant by them
in this place, we must a little reflect upon the former temp-
tation. There he used the same phrase before ; and here he
is up with it again ; ' If Thou be the Son of God.' He was
much troubled with it, it seems, and a great mote it was in
his eye, that by a voice from heaven, as a little while since at
Mat. 3. 17. His baptism, Christ should be said and proclaimed to be
the Son of God. That voice bred all this mischief; and no
sooner was it sent from heaven, but up comes the devil from
hell to send it back again ; and because it came out of the
clouds, ye shall see what ways and turnings the devil has to
wrap it up in the clouds again, that it might be no more
heard of here on earth'*.
(1.) He comes first like a desperate and a murmm'ing
dcAdl, Avith a few stones in his hand, and an ' if of doubt and
desperation in his mouth, and tells Cludst that sure the voice
from heaven was but a deceitful voice ; that it could not be
that He should be Filius dilectus, the well beloved Son of
God ; for the children of God do not use to be so dealt withal
as He was, to have nothing but a heap of stones set before
Him, vrhen they desire food to eat; for what man is there,
Mat. 7. 9. who if his son ask him bread, would give him a stone ? and
therefore that He was but some hunger-bitten child, who was
cast out of the world, and no such beloved Son of God as the
voice from heaven made Him believe He was. This was his
first 'if;' ' If Thou be the Son of God ;' to bring Him by a
'' See Jansenii Concord, cap. xv. p. 12(). edit. Ibl. Lugd. 1577.
The devil tempts to presumption. Gl
doubt to despair <^ of it, and to resolve witli Himself that the
Son of God He was not. And this way would do no good.
Now seeing that would not prevail, he goes another Avay
to work ; and here he comes like a fine white de\dl, like a
pure, smooth-tongued hypocrite, with no more doubting ' ifs,'
whether He were the Son of God, or no; but an 'if of
flattery in his mouth ; that surely the Son of God He was ;
' If Thou be the Son of God ;' an ' if of concession and
granting, that he would have Him make no question of it,
but that He was the very Son of God indeed. So you see
the difi'erence betwixt these two ' ifs,' and the sense of it, as
it is to be taken in this place.
That you see; and you may see withal the wonderful
device of the de^dl, who can transform himself with one and
the same saying in his mouth, to tAvo several shapes. Before,
He was not the Son of God, by these very words ; and now
He is the Son of God, by these very words again. He makes
them serve for two contrary purposes ; there, he would make
it serve for desperation ; and when that would not do, here
he would make it serve for presumption ; that one way or
other, he might prevail. In the former temptation he came
out like a malcontent and a murmnrer, but here he comes
forth like a flattering parasite. Well then, if Thou be the
Son of God, as I doubt not but Thou art, as now I grant
indeed, I was in some doubt before, but now I confess Thou
art, now I am of the Voice's mind, which did pronounce
Thee to be so at Thy Baptism, — Yon are His well-beloved
Son, and He will be well pleased with whatsoever You please
to do. So now He shall have too much of it, as before He
had too little ; and when the light will not out by taking away
the oil, He shall have too much of it. He shall swim in the
oil of ostentation, to see an that would put it out.
A case that happens to us all. When a man will not be
presumptuous, then he is a fit subject to be brought unto
despair" ; and when he will not be distrustful, then make him
to presume. If he will not superstitiously dote upon the
Church, then bring him to that which our people are most
an end brought unto, make him not care for it at all ; or if
•^ See the passages from the Fathers quoted hy Barradius, Harm. Evang.
ii. 67.
62 . The devil's pertinacity in temptation.
s E R M. not tliatj send him over sea and make him dote again. There
'^- might be many more instances ; still he comes in extremes
and contraries, that if he be refused and known to be a de^il
in the one, ye may at least accept him, and think him to be
an Angel in the other ; for who would think it, that he were
the man that should tempt anybody to presumption, that
had before laboured for distrust ? or that he would make the
flame fly out of the chimney, and set the whole house a-fire,
that had so lately set his foot on it, and done his endeavour
to put it quite out ? Marry, he that is acquainted with the
devil's devices will think it, and know it too ; for though it
be not the same temptation, yet it is the same devil in both
places ; and the suddeu alteration fi'om one contrary to
another, is but to colour the device over, and make us be-
lieve they cannot both be ill.
But seeing that by both the de\Tl seeks our destruction,
we are to take a like heed of both ; though his two ' ifs^ be
contrary to themselves, yet are they both also contrary to
the Word of God, which will neither have us to distrust
Him, nor presume upon Him.
(2.) Secondly, ' If Thou be the Son of God,' may be
taken as an outfacing argument ; as Avlien we would impor-
tune a man to do any thing, we use to press and ui'ge him
with that which he must not for shame deny; if you be
such and such a man, if there be any spark of a good
spirit in you, if there be any honesty in you, you will not
refuse to do it. So the devil comes as if he must have no
denial at all, unless Chi'ist would confess Himself to be none
of God's Son, and then the devil had had his end; just as the
Joh. 19.12. Jews by his counsel, I make no question, dealt with Pilate, ' If
thou let Him go, thou art no friend to Cesar,' and, ' if He had
Joh.18.30. not been a malefactor, we would never have brought Him
unto thee.' No, the devil he desires you to do nothing but
what you must needs yield to yoxu'selves, that it is very
requisite to be done ; if it were a matter unfitting, he would
never ask it at your hands ; and this is the strongest tempta-
tion of all ; though it would not outface Christ, yet it will
outface us. And therefore above all other, heed is to be
taken of an outfacing temptation.
(3.) Now, thirdly, if Christ were the Son of God, as the
The object of this temjAation. 63
devil confesses Him to be, what had he to do with Ilim?
They cry out ere long, ' What have we to do with Thee, O Mat. 8. 29.
Thou Sou of the living God?^ No, nothing to do with llini
when He comes to torment him. Do but resist the devil and
he will fly from you, he will not come near you. Marry, an ye
be willing (as Christ made Himself here for oiu' warning of
the danger) to go along with him, then he has to do with
you in a hundred different ways ; be what sons of God ye
will, that one way or other, he may make you, as himself is,
the sons of darkness ; and__for the better bringing of his ends
about, he will be still sui'e in all his talk to make an ' if of
it, and so wind in \nth an ill consequence at last ; and by
often bringing it into question, whether we be the sons of
God, he may at last make it out of question, that we are not
the sons of God ; bring his si sis into a ne sis and make us
like himself. And so much for the first part of the devil^s
device; a wonderfid and a strange device, to persuade us
that we are the sons of God, and by that very persuasion to
make us the sons of the devil.
II. For vou shall see what his induction is; 'If Thou
be the Son of God cast Thyself down headlong;' and this
is the second part, the very fiery dart of the devil's temp-
tation.
And here we have three points to consider.
The first is, the ill consequence of the words, that if He
were the Son of God, He should presently give a leap from
the pinnacle, and work a miracle.
The second is, the presumption Avhich he persuades Him
to, to take no ordinary way to go down, but to make no
more ado but cast Himself down, and put Himself upon
pro^'idence.
The thii'd is, that earnest suit which he makes for it ; he
would not thrust Him down, but of His own accord He
Himself must cast Himself down.
(1.) For the first then, it was no good consequence we
say, that if He Avere the Son of God, He should presently
cast Himself down. 'Yes,' says the devil, 'by this, all the
world shall see that You are the Son of God, if You can leap
down and get no hurt.^ So this was his drift, because Christ
was the Son of God, to make Him brag of it, and carry it
64 Temptation to arrogance and presumption.
s E R M. out with au ostentation, that the Son of God He was, and
. '- — not like other men ; a device that he has for us, when we are
somewhat nearer to God than other men, persuade us not to
be content with that, but to blaze it abroad the world and
make a boasting and a show of it, as such do that love to be
called the professors of the Gospel, and the dear children of
God, dearer and whiter and purer sons, and so bolder sons,
than any other men whatsoever. But to see now what a
71071 sequitur this is, Christ was the Son of God, — well what
of that ? — therefore He must needs shew Himself to be so,
and work a miracle when there was no necessity of having
any wrought. What a conseqiience was this here ! At other
times, indeed, miracles were done by Him, they were all to
good ends ; but here it could be for no other end but vain-
gloi'y and ostentation ; no other use could have been made of
it ; and if Clirist had yielded to it, or if any man else in the
like case should yield to the devil's temptation, he should
shew himself indeed, but he should shew himself to be none
of the sons of God. So this is no good logic, it is an argu-
ment of an ill consequence ; let us not be carried away with
it, if at any time it happens to be our case, as here it was
Christ's.
(2.) Second, ' Cast Thyself down ;' this is that he looked
for, the very temptation itself, that being now aloft. He would
make no more ado but presume"^ upon His Father, and pitch
His head upon the ground. So now Ave are come to know
why he brought Him up, that it was for nothing else but to
have Him down again the faster; it was the way that he
took of old for himself, and ever since liis device hath been how
to get more after him ; he would needs exalt himself above
the stars, and down he fell lower than the earth ; that if he
could have got Christ down with him now, he knew by ex-
perience (whatsoever his pretence was) that all the Angels of
heaven could not have Him up again. But this is it which
we are here to observe ; by such dealing as this was, Ave may
see to Avhat end all the dcAil's exaltings come". If he brings
any man to the pinnacle, it is but to send him down head-
'' Seethe quotations from St. GrejTory ' Diabolus semper ad alta ducit,
the Great, Haymo and Beda in Barrad. elevando per jactantiam, ut pruecipitare
Harm. Evang. ii. 70. possit. Glossa ()r<!iiiar. ad k)cum.
The devil tempts hy prosperity. G5
long, faster than ever lie came up ; by little and little he
lifts a man up, first to this preferment, and then to that, and
then to another, and to a higher yet; and so when he has
gotten him aloft, he can send him downwards again in an
instant; not by degrees, as he came u^), but like lightning, Lu. lo. is.
as he came down himself, and was undone by it for ever.
Perhaps he may let us alone a while, and let us stand upon
a pinnacle, to our thinking as safe as them that walk upon
the ground; but as soon as a little wind of trouble and
adversity comes, then off we go, and we shall be sure to pay
for our higli standing. This is the devil's course with them
that are at league with him, and will foUoAv his devices. Now
God has taken another course wdth Ilis, for He humbles a
man first, and then He exalts him afterwards. ' He hath
exalted the humble and meek,' said the blessed Virgin; and Lu. 1.52.
' he that humblcth himself shall be exalted,' saith our
blessed Saviour. But the devil, he exalts a man first, and Lu. 14. ii.
then humbles him after; lifts him up on high, ut /apsu
graviore mat, that he may cast him headlong down again.
So he lifted up Adam and Eve to eritis sicut dii, with a con-
ceit that they should be gods themselves, the very height of Gen. 3. o.
perfection ; and mIicu all came to all, it was for nothing else
but that he might bring them down again a great deal lower
than they were before, even to be compared unto the beasts
that perish.
The lesson is, that if we would not be cast down by him,
we must take heed of being any way, or in any matter what-
soever, lifted up by him ; for we must not all think to escape
as Christ did ; Pie had power to throw the devil down, and
He went not up with him for any other purpose but to shew
us the danger and the hazard men are in, when they will
follow the de\'il to a pinnacle, or their ambition, and other
sins they love, to the height. This one may be sure on, that
in all manner of sin and temptation there is a casting down ;
and the devil never allures us to commit a sin, but he makes
us withal to throw ourselves down headlong; headlong from
the spirit to the flesh, from the commandments of God to the
vanities of the world, from high virtues to base vices, and so
from being the sons of God and of light, to become the sons
of hell and darkness ; and he never allures us upwards the
COSIN. -a
66 All sin is voluntary.
s E R M. other Avay but to cast ourselves downwards. And this is the
: second.
(3.) But now, in the third point, there is a little more com-
fort yet, that the devil must become a suitor to Christ, that
He woidd cast Himself down. A man may wonder, an the
devil had such a mind to have Christ down, Avhy he did not
throw Him down himself? But alas ! it was beyond his
power, that ; or if it had not, yet that woidd not have served
his turn ; for then Christ should not have been in the fault,
and it was not the fall, but the fault that he looked after.
It is our case, the devil winds us uj), and he would gladly
have us down again, but he would have us to cast ourselves
down, or else the fall may do us some hurt, perhaps, but it
can do him no good. It is our sin that he looks after, and
he knows it too well, that there must go two persons to a sin,
or else it will never be done. It is the devil and man that
make up a sin ; it is not the devil alone ; and sure it is, he
can never throw us down unless we consent on to it our-
selves^. And therefore, though it be one of St. Chrysostom's
paradoxes, yet it is a marvellous good one and a Christian-
like, that 7iemo Iceditur nisi a seipso?, that if we throw not
ourselves away, the devil hath no power to do it^ ; Avhich is
no more than St. Austin' and all the ancient Fathers say, that
V7nne peccatum est voluntarium, when we sin the fault is in
our own wills, for we should not have consented, and then
no sin w ould follow ; and therefore it is a wicked and a most
pernicious opinion that some of our new masters have brought
up of late, (an opinion fit for devils and not for Christians,)
that some men are forced and necessitated to sin, and
throw themselves away, whether tliev will or no"". I shall
beseech you to take heed that they which teach you such
' Dicit autem [diabolus] 'IMitteTe; ^ Allusion is here made to the recent
qviia vox ciiaboli, qui semper homines proceedings of the Synod of Dort, whose
cadere deorsum desiderat, persuadere decisions had attracted considerable
potest ; praecipitare non potest. S. interest througliout England. The
Hieron. in Tho. Aquin. Cat. Aur. ad third of these Articles, treating 'of
locum. man's free will in the state of nature,'
e See the Homily bearing this title, asserts ' That by Adam's fall his pos-
in the edition of Erasmus, vol. v. fol. terity lost their free-will, being ])ut to
213, b. edit. fol. 153(). or in Saville's an iniavoidable necessity to do or not
edition, vii. 36. to do, whatsoever they do or do" not,
'' A few words are here nearly ille- whether it be good or evil, being there-
gible in the MS. unto predestinated by the eternal and
' 0pp. viii. 316, 347, &c. effectual secret decree of God.'
No absolute decree to sin. C>7
tilings be not listened after, for they savour of the lake, and
yonr souls will be destroyed with the scent. It is not true ;
God doth not, and the dc\'il cannot, necessitate anybody to
sin ; and therefore we see in Genesis that he did not cram
the forbidden fruit into their mouths, whether they would or
no, but he persuades them to take it, and cat it themschcs ;
for full well he knew their own eating, and their own wilful-
ness, and neither his svditlety, nor his violence, would get
them the fall. And when it is said in the Gospel, that the
Evil Spirit enters into a man, it is not said that he breaks
open the door, or that he does so much as draw the latch,
but that he finds it empty and open already, and all things Mat.l2.44.
swept and garnished, ready for his entertainment. So that
if we reach not out our hands to welcome him when he
comes, and set not our doors open to let him in when he
knocks, his temptations can never do us hui't ; he can but
entreat us, as here he did Christ, and if we fall, the fault is
our own, Ave east ourselves down headlong into misery and
sin. That^s for the devil's part.
Then for God's part. We may be sure that He, of all
others, will not cast us do^m, if we will keep ourselves up ;
for He desires not either the death, or the overthrow of any
man. And therefore, as it was His command of old in
Deuteronomy, that when a material house Avere built, there Deut.22.8.
should be battlements made upon the roof, for fear of falling
down when any man went up, and spilling his blood ; so in
His spiritual buildings. He hath set Himself and His own
assistance for our battlement, hath made a hedge about us, as
the devil said concerning Job ; that unless we will take our Job i . i o.
raise ' ourselves and leap over it, or break it down and throw ' race
ourselves headlong through it, we are safe enough. This
Christ knew well enough, and therefore He trusted to this,
that we might learn of Him, how ill a thing it is to trust to
ourselves. And that's the third thing and the last there.
Now you shall see what course the devil takes to get this
trust away from Him ; and so we come to the third part of
the text ; the cost which he does bestow upon his temptation,
to make it enter the better.
III. He comes with a Psalm-book in his hand and a piece
of Scripture in his mouth to tell Him that since He would
F 2
68 Temptation either to distrust or jjresumjition.
S E R M. needs trust, lie Avould set II im a-trusting, He slioiild trust as
IV.
much as He Avould ; that is, He should trust too much. And
as in the former temptation he brought Him to the waters of
Num. 20. Meribah, to murmiu' and distrust ; so here he brings Him to
,, ' ,J - the waters of Massah, to be wanton and trust beyond His
battlements. By the one he would persuade both Him and
us, as St. Augustine saith, Deum non affxdurum ubi pi'omisit,
that God hath no care of us according to His promise; by
the other, he would persuade us, Deum ajfuturum ubi non pro-
misit, that God would take any care of us, even against His
promise : and so by the first he slandereth the God of
heaven, as if He were some step-father, a hard man and a
god of iron ; and by this he slanders Him, as if He were a
father to be commanded at a beck, and a god of clouts to be
put to base and contemptible offices. First, that we are none
of His children, and that if we do trust in Him, He will fail
us at the end ; and then that we are such beloved children,
such dear darlings, that trust in Him, and presume upon Him
as much as we will, throAV ovirselves down headlong into what
sin we list, He will be our good father still. He will have
mercy at last, and will never suffer us to come unto any hurt
for it. This is the sum and the scope of his tempting speech.
Now if the time would serve, we should consider it a little
more narrowly; I will but begin it and end it at a more [con-
venient opportunity.]
' For it is written.^ With the self-same armour that Christ
bare off his other dart, with alleging of Scripture, doth the
devil sharpen this dart, and throws it in to maintain his
argument that presumption is good divinity : since Christ
brought Scripture to resist him, he would make his part good
with Scripture too ; and therefore here he brings it in. Now
it is to be noted he doth not so (as I told you at first) in any
of his other temptations, and therefore we are to look for
some great matter from him here in this. A great matter
indeed^ and a great deal to be said of it, so much that it will
require one whole sermon for itself ; and therefore I dare but
name it now, and tell you in brief that the reason why the
denl hath bestowed such cost upon this temptation, more
than upon the rest, is, because he knows a presumptuous sin is
a costly sin indeed to us, and would be gainful to him above
Presumption a deadly sin. GO
any else. Therefore it is tliat, before all others, David desires Ps. 19. 13.
God to keep him from presumptuous sins; for if it comes to
this once, the devil has his end, and we have ours an end,
that he had, by the very same sin ; which is a fearful down-
fal from heaven and from the mercies of God withal. The
sin of presumption, as divines' say, being one, or very near
one, of the sins against the Holy Ghost, which shall not
easily be forgiven. For a conclusion then, since we see thus Mat.l2.3l.
much already, that above all other sins which the devil would
have us commit, this is that he sets his greatest care upon,
and, as we say, spends his wits, his learning, his cunning in
the Scriptures, his wet and his dry upon it ; in that regard
are we also to set our greatest care against his, to set watch
and ward about our souls : and above all other things, to
keep ourselves from presumptuous sins, that is, from a wilful
casting ourselves into sin ; and when we stand safe already
with God's graces and favours, like battlements round about
us, to break them all down, and throw ourselves headlong
into mischief, where God knows what will become of us.
Let us not deceive ourselves, and hope for Angels to come and
take us up again, because the de\'il hath here alleged Scrip-
ture for it; for if you will but look into your Psalter anon, Ps. oi. ii,
after you are gone, you shall find that he hath both abused ^"
us, and the place too, and hath cast out the principal matter
that made against him, for that Psalm does not say that the
Angels shall have an absolute charge either of Him or us, a
charge without any limitation at all ; that they must hold us
up, come we down which way we will, headlong or any way
over God's bounds which He hath set us; but that they
should hold us up in all His ways. We must keep us here,
and then they will look to us. So that out of God's way, the
Angels have no charge over us.
The way then will be to keep us there in His ways, and not
to run a wanton course in our own ; and then we shall be
sure of them; they shall stretch their wings over us, and
pitch their tents round about us to defend us. They shall
preserve us from the snare which we see not, as it is in that
Psalm, From the terror of the night, and from the arrow that
' S. Thorn. Aquin. 2a. 2ae. q. H. dist. 43, and Estius in locum, ii. 441,
art. 1. Pet. Lomb. Sentent. lib. 2. edit. 1G15.
70 Trust to be placed in God alone.
S E R M. flictli by clay, (and -wliicli at this time wc have great need on"^,)
iv
rs.91.5,6,
from that dccmon meridianus, the plague tliat killeth in the
darkness, and the siekness that destroyeth in the noon-day.
All these comforts, and more than these, even the comforts
of heaven, shall be to them that so put their trust in God as
that they fear Him withal, and walk in His ways, according
]'s. 117. to that of the Psalmist, Blessed are they that fear the Lord
and put their trust in His mercy ; fear Him first and keep
His way, and then trust in Him that He will keep us.
To which fear and to Avhich trust, and from all other fears
and trusts but these. He bring us That hath purchased mercy
• for us, Christ Jesus, &c.
" From this passage we may con- First] there was a great plague in the
jecture that this Sermon was preached City, but this was far greater, the
in A.D. l(i2o, in which summer, accord- greatest that ever was known in the
ing to Rushworth, (i. 171. edit. 1721,) nation." A passage in tlie following
" the pestilence raged in London. At Sermon, upon the same text, is yet more
the entrance of tlie late king [James the definite; seep. 78.
SERMON V.
St. Matthew iv. G.
. . . For it is written, He shall give His Jnr/els charge over Thee ;
and ivith their hands they shall hold Thee up, lest at amj time
Thou dash Thy foot against a stone.
[. . . He shcdl giv(f His Angels charge concerning Thee ; and in their
hands theij shdl bear Thee up, lest at any time Thou dash Thy foot
against a stone.l
We began this text l)efore, and in our meditations we saw
what wreaths and windings the old serpent had, to turn him-
self round, or at length, to pull in, or let out, as he listed ;
that first he would have Christ not to trust God at all, but
to shift for Himself, and make the stones His bread ; and then
to do nothing else but trust Him, do nothing Himself but go
down headlong into mischief, and rely upon God's mercy for
it that He should never take any hurt by the matter : for
lest any man should tell Him that presumption in such a
case is no good divinity, he will prove it out of the written
Word of God, You must not deny it, for it is written. He
shall give His Angels charge over Thee, &c.
St. Paul tells us that the devil's temptations are fiery
darts, and this was one of them. The fire that prepared it Eph.G. lo'.
went before, and it was still wrought upon that anvil, si sis
Filius Dei, 'if Thou be the Son of God;' he would try Him
here. And the dart being so wrought, we have seen also
how it was cast ; it was cast when he bade Christ cast Him-
self down headlong, ' If Thou be the Son of God, cast Thyself
down headlong;' so far Ave went already. Now are we to come
to the third point, which is the very point of the dart, the
sharpening it, and the cost bestowed upon it, to make it
72 Division of the subject.
SERM. enter the better; that is, the pLace of Scriptui'e which here
L the devil docs allege to persuade Christ, and every one else
that is the son of God, that they may safely presume upon
His mercy for any thing; for it is written, 'lie shall give
His Angels charge,' &c.
Which words we must not now handle as if we had
David's Psalter in our hand, and the ninety-first Psalm for
our text ; for then perhaps we should work a little higher ;
but we are to consider them as they are in the devil's mouth,
and here in this place alleged and perverted for his own
purpose, as far as they do, or do not, concern tliat which he
would have had them ; whether it be so good trusting to God
or no, as that if we be His sons we may leap over the battle-
ments and bounds that He hath set us, and throw om'selves
headlong into what sin and danger we please.
I will proceed in this order, to let yon first see the denl's
cunning in alleging any Scripture at all, ' It is Avritten ;'
And secondly, his master-cunning in aUegiug such a
choice and master-piece of Scriptm-e, so full of comfort and
promises as this is, ' He shall give,' &c.
And thirdly, his falsehood in leaving out that which made
against him, for the charge and the promises were that the
Angels should keep Him in all His ways; the de^dl he leaves
out that, and says, they shall keep Him howsoever, whether
He keep His ways or not ;
And lastly, his fraud and malice in perverting the Avhole
sense of the text, as if it served to make presumption lawful,
and to rely upon God's providence for any thing ; good reli-
gion, whenas in such cases as these^ it was mere devil-divinity.
These fom- to be our heads that we take ; from which divers
other branches will spring, which we mind to reach at as we
go along. Of these then, that we may speak to the honour of
Almighty God, and to the edification of our own souls, I
shall desire you to join Avith me in humble and hearty
prayer, &c.
THE BIDDING OF THE COMMON PRAYERS.
Pater Noster.
1. 'For it is written.' That is tlie first tiling I propounded,
the devil's cunning to allege Scripture for what he said.
The character of the teinptattoti changed. 73
To make liis temptation take tlie better, lie comes in witli
his antliovity, and his scripium est; he will shew you a place of
Scripture for it, a text out of DavitVs Psalms, that you may sec
he counsels you to nothing but what the word of God would
bear you out in. When St. Paul would commend a thing, says i Cor. 9. 8.
he, ' Do I say so ? doth not the law say the same ? ' so says
the de^^l here. Do I persuade you to this ? and doth not the
Book of Psalms commend the same? He speaks not after the
manner of men, he, but he has the Scripture at his fingers'
end, so it is no more he that speaketh, but the Spu'it of God
That is within him.
In his first temptation he came like a murmuring mal-
content, without any Scripture in his mouth at all ; that
would not do ; Christ quotes him a place of Scripture and he
was gone. But then he studies on the matter which way to
come again. Scriptiim est? says the devil. It is wi'itten?
said Christ so ? And He was acquainted with the Scripture
too ? Well, then, since Scripture was so gracious with Ilim, he
could bring in Scriptiu'e as well as Christ; and so bethinking
himself presently he throws away his stones, and gets him a
Psalm-book in his hand, puts ofl' his foul shape of a devil and
a murmurer, and gets him into the weeds of a holy professor,
and so with a demure look, and set countenance, he comes
back again this second time to Christ, tells Him that he had
heard Him erewhiles talk of Scripture, and that therefore he
had brought Scripture for Him, as liking very well of that
godly course of quoting Scripture for what was said in any
thing ; that He was deceived in him if He thought him to
be an unlettered man, or one of those that cared not for the
Scriptiu-es, for he had here brought them along with him,
and could turn Him to the place, and quote Him chapter and
verse too for what he said, ' For it is written. He shall give
His Angels charge over Thee,' &c.
And all these, good words and godly ; but when they come
out of a hypocrite's mouth, or a de\'irs mouth, let them be
what words they will, they are but wind.
It is not this bragging age, nor this vainglorious generation,
that they can quote Scripture so fast, which will carry it
away, for we see the devil reads the Scriptures as well as we,
and he can allege ye Samuel's own words, insomuch that i Sam. 28.
^ ^ ' 11, 14,&c.
74 7%e devil misapplies Scripture.
s E R M. thcv shall not know him from Samuel; and as for David's
'■ Psalms and yc ask him for them, Avhy he can sing them all
by heart, or else he has them ready with him in his hands ;
and Christ he knows, and Paul he knows, he tells them so
Actsl9.l5. in the Acts ; he was well acquainted with them, that is to say,
that there was neither Christ in His Gospel, nor St. Paul in
his Epistles, but he knew them very well and conld tell what
tliey had preached, and what they had written too ; and yet
for all this knowledge in the Scriptm-c he was no better than
a hypocrite and a devil still.
Not that we wonld patronise any ignorance in this kind,
or discourage them that are studious to know the Scriptures;
but that we would not have them rest there, to think if they
had got that_, they had got all, or to use them for a coloiu' to
make the world think they are such goodly professors, when
there is no such matter, to play the hypocrites with them, or
bring them forth to hold argument against Christ, or against
His Church, as you know there are, that so use them; for
this is the devil's way ; we see he can quote Scriptui'e after
this manner. And be this said for the first point, 'It is
written.'
II. Second, Now what is written ? ' He shall give His Angels
charge over Thee,' &c. A place of the greatest comfort, and
the fittest to make a man presume, that he could have picked
out ; and this is the second thing.
It is his subtilty not to choose every Psalm, but one that
should have most comfort, and most grace in it of any other;
the ninety-first Psalm, than which there is not one fidler of
fair promises, whether we regard things for this life, or for
the life to come. And of this Psalm he takes not every verse,
but takes that which is of as much mercy and grace as any
one thing can be, that of the protection of Angels.
For mark you, what mercies and what promises there are,
and ever have been, in this protection. There shall be Angels
ascending and descending to take care of us as we lay, as in
Gen.28.12. Jacob's ladder. The Angel of the Lord shall go before us,
Ex. u. 19. j^g jjg (J J J before the Israelites ; they shall kill up our enemies,
2 Kings! f). rouud about us, as they did the Egyptians and other nations;
^j*. ; ^.^^•'^''" they shall stretch their wings over us to preserve us, they
7. 41. shall pitch their tents about our dwellings to defend us, and
JtT. (i. :j.
TJie doctrine of Faith misapplied. 75
their protection shall not reach to our heads only, Init onr
Aery feet shall be safe, and in their hands they shall bear
them up, that they shall not trip against a stone ; they will
not warn us on\x, that there is a stone in the way, but they
will (as Christ said they should) remove and gather them out
of the way for us; and last of all, that they shall not do all this
out of courtesy, or because they are lovers of mankind, nor
shall not at their pleasure leave off when they list, but by
special mandate and charge they are and shall be bound to
do it, they have a precept for it.
All these goodly and gracious promises are comprehended
in this charge and protection of the Angels ; and all these
doth the devil here abuse, as we shall see anon.
In the mean while, this is not the only place of mercy that-
the devil has got by heart. He came to Christ here, with a
Psalm of mercy, how comes he to us? Marry, with a Psalm
of mercy too, and he will make it out of the New Testament
the rather, because we live not under the Old Law. He will
turn Gospeller too; any thing to bring his ends to pass.
His Psalm shall begin Quicumcjue crediderit, salvabitur, out of
St. Mark, Whosoever will be saved he must believe rightly, Mark i(>.
and that is enough. The next verse shall be out of St. *''•
JNIatthew, Cast your care upon God, for He careth for you. Mat. 6.
and then you may cast yourselves where you list. Another '
verse out of St. Paul, You are iustified by faith, and Christ Rom. 3.
hath set you free from the law, come no more under bondage. " ' • •
And it is not I that make up this Psalm, or pick out these
places for him ; look abroad into the world and see whether
he hath taught a great company of silly men to sing it,
whether their mouths be not readier for these sayings than
for any else. Aye, aye, ye may talk of works, that is a
popish argument, but let a man believe faithfully, and he
shall be justified Avell enough ; we are the free-born sons of
God, and therefore ye shall put no yoke upon us, for they
whom Christ hath set free are free indeed. Free from what ?
from good Avorks and obedience to Christ's law ? No ; but
from sin and the slavery of Satan. So the Avords in them-
selves are indeed the most comfortable sayings that a Chris-
tian can hear, and most excellent use there is that may be
made of them ; but Avhen the devil and a hypocrite get
76 The devil misquotes Scripture.
s E R M. tlicm into tlicir mouths there is no listening after them, they
— are temptations and snares unto men ; and wliat should have
been unto them for their advantage, may quickly become
unto them an occasion of falling, that is, as it is here in the
text, of falling down headlong into sin. And be this said for
the second point; that of all other Scriptures, these which
should have the best use made of them, he and his disciples,
they that learn it of him, (for they can learn it of nobody
else,) make the worst.
Now out of these two we have this use to make, that to be
cunning in Scriptures is no such mark of the child of God
' persuade as somc men would bear us in hand' withal ; and that, though
the de^dl hath indeed a grace with them that are profane,
with some vain youths of the court, ungodly men, to set them
a-scoffing at the Scriptures, and to believe nothing, yet with
others that have the Scriptures in more high reverence, he
goes another way to work, making it unto them (without
2Cor.2.l6. great heed and care taken) not as it is, in itself, the savour of
life unto life, but the savour of death unto death ; which God
in His mercy keep from us all. So I come to the third point.
III. Third, And the third is the fraud and the falsehood that
here the devil uses in his quotation : to leave out the chief
matter of all, the matter that made against him, and the
matter, indeed, whereon all the Angels' charge is grounded.
The Psalm runs, ' He shall give His Angels charge over Thee,
to keep Thee in all Thy ways;' and the devil makes it run.
He shall give His Angels charge over Thee, whether Thou
keep Thy ways or no ; leaves that quite out, that keeping of the
waj^s, for the truth is, it would have spoiled his whole tempta-
tion. That if any one should take offence and scandal now
by this, that he hears the devil quote Scripture as well as
Christ, and therefore that nobody knows well what to make
of them, and in his blasphemy say they are divided, and that
one Scripture is on Christ's side, and another on the devil's
1 Cor. 1.1 2. side, and so makes one of Paul, and another of Apollos, and
another of Cephas, and another of any thing ; if any man, I
say, shall thus be scandalized by the de^^l's bringing in of
Scripture for himself, here is his ansAver for him, that it is
not Scripture and Scripture, but Scripture and perverted
Scripture, that it seems to be divided.
Why the devil misquotes Scripture. 77 .
By any means let not sucli a tlionglit enter into us, that
were a worse mischief than the other ; for as it is a snare to
sec the devil so ready with Scrij)ture, so it is a worse snare to
think that Christ is any way divided, and to set the Scrip-
tures together by the ears. We must know that here the
tempter played the devil right, in leaving out that whicli
would have made all even, that they might keep Ilim in all
His ways ; and had he but quoted that, the Scriptiu'cs would
have agreed well enough, all had been for Christ, and no
oflcnce need to have been taken at them.
But so it is, the devil leaves it out ; and so true it is
withal, that as he has a rack for some places of Scripture to
stretch them out upon the tenters, till they crack again, as it
is said of St. Paul's Epistles ; so here he has his wrest for other
places, to pull them in, a device that the musician has to
make the string sound high or low at his pleasure. He can
add as he sees cause, and he can take away from the word of
God, contrary to God's own and express command. Rev. 22.
Now let us see what cause he had to leave those words out. Deut''-! 2-
]\Iarry, great cause, to bring his own ends about, for by this 12. 32.
means he Avould persuade us that the Angels here had an
absolute charge over us, without any limitation at all, and
that they must take care of us, take we Avhat way we please,
cast ourselves down headlong, or any way ; no matter for
keeping those ways that God has set us in, to walk uprightly
in them ; but keep them, or not keep them, the Angels shall
keep us however. And this was the height of his tempta-
tion, and the true reason why he left out those words.
For had he cited them, ' to keep Thee in all Thy ways,' a
man would have thought there had been some ways to keep,
and not to take a strange headlong way, and throw himself
from the pinnacle. Certain it is that God has made a way
down, and if we keep us not to that, the Angels are dis-
charged of their office from kec[)ing us, and they will look
no more after us. The Avay from the pinnacle was to go
down the ordinary way by the staii's, tliat God had appointed
to be made for that purpose ; and not to leap over the battle-
ments at once, and dash a man's head against the stones, in
hope that the Angels will hold him up. Shew me where
God ever appointed any such way. This is all in a parable
78 The ordinary means to be employed.
s E R jM. yet ; tlie meaning is^ that God has appointed ordinary means
: — for us to stand and preserve ourselves in the ways of His
commandments; and lie \\dll not have Ilis providence
tempted by our wilful falling into sin and danger ; if we
will keep us in His ways, so it is ; if not, He is not bound
to keep us in ours. We light upon a fit time for one thing ;
the time of God's heavy hand upon this kingdom by plague
and pestilence, and well it is for them that are troubled Avith
it, to cast themselves upon God, and to put their Avhole trust
in His mercy, using notwithstanding those means which He
has appointed, and to be as resolute in a godly courage as
Job was in the Hke case, that though God would kill him.
Job 13. 15. yet he would trust in Him. But for them now that are not
in this danger, not cast into it by God, to cast themselves
into it, to run, as the humour is among some, upon the
naked point of so devouring a sword, and to use no means
to avoid it, but to set up their rest upon a wild conceit of
predestination, that God will work His work, and that men
do not well to be so scrupulous, but if they be appointed to
it the}" shall have it, and if they have a strong faith (as they
say) perhaps they shall never have it, — this is a mere mad-
ness, a tempting of God, and a presuming upon His provi-
dence, without any warrant but that which the devil signs.
And so in other things throughout a whole Christian
man's life, it is the like case, God will not be grated upon
and overleaped with presumption; He will have us use
those means and ways that He has set us, or else He will
not be troubled with us, to acknowledge us and keep us for
His own.
In Genesis there is a ladder set from earth to heaven, and
here are degrees and stairs made from the pinnacle to the
ground; there the Angels were ascending and descending
with us, as here they are to take charge over us, but yet
upon this condition, that we will keep God's way with them,
go up and down by the degrees of the ladder, and use those
means that God has appointed for us, or else they are gone.
Kow here are we gone too, for we would be kept, but we
wovdd be kept in our own ways, nay we would be kept in the
way to heaven too, but then we would willingly have it
" See note at p. 70.
Popular eri'ors in rellfjion censured. 79
somewhat broader than it is, that we and onr sins might go
along together. God's way is somewhat tedious and trouble-
some with us, and since it is but one leap from the pinnacle
to the ground, we had rather venture for that than be put to
go about by so many degrees and stairs ; and if any man
tells VIS that this is a preposterous May and a wrong course,
and labours to turn us out of it into a right, we are ready to
draw upon him, and threaten fire and sword ; for we will
have our own path, and we will not be kept out of it.
It is an old way I confess, as old as Adam in Paradise, but
a great while it lay hid, and at last a little new divinity found
it out again, and (by the deviFs device) laid it open for men's
easier j)assage. St. Paul tells us that of old there were many i Cor. 12.
degrees in Christianity, preaching, hearing, believing, invo- ' '^''^'
eating, all in order, and so foreknowing, predestinating, Rom. 8.
calling, justifying, sanctifying, and at last glorifying, all in "'^' '^^^•
order too. Now our new masters would teach us a shorter
cut and make but one degree in all Christianity, as if there
were but one step from the ground to the pinnacle. They
teach a man to take his raise' from predestination, and to give 1 race
a jump into glorification without any more ado ; no matter
for mortification, or justification, or sanctification ; they be
no degrees Avith them ; they must not be put to go up and
down the stairs like other men, for they have a by-Avay of
solitary faith by themselves, that has but one stride in it,
and you are presently in heaven, or where you would be.
And as the devil brought Scripture here for his way, so do
they for theirs ; for they have the Scriptures at will, they say
they have it from St. Paul, that he who is once predestinated
is sm'e enough for ever ; let him go and throw himself Avhich
way he will, he cannot fall, or if he does, the stones shall
never hm-t him ; if he be the son of God once, the Angels
must have absolute charge to keep him, for God's children
are such darlings, and He doth so dote upon them, that
though they commit never so many downfal mortal sins, yet
they shall be in grace and favour, in the state of grace still ;
He will not sufier them in any wise to take the least hurt
that may be. And now let all the world judge whether this
new, be not the devil's old divinity.
They tell us of a ladder of faith that has but one step in
80 MavbS extremihj is God's oppoj-t unity.
SERM. it, and they say it is St. Paul's, but an tLcy remember, there
'- — is a bidder of practice too, that has a great many more in it,
^ ■ ■ ■ and we say it is St. Peter's, beginning where St. Paul's left,
join to your faith virtue, and to your virtue knowledge, and to
your knowledge temperance, and to temperance patience, and
to patience piety, and to piety brotherly love, &c. There is
a way for you now, from the ground to the pinnacle, and
from earth to heaven, the way that the Angels Avill keep us
in ; and if we keep not in this way, we must keep ourselves,
and God knows that will be but a sorry keeping ; for the
Angels have no charge over us, save onh^ to keep us in all
His ways. And be this much said for the third point.
IV. Now the perverting of all (which is the fourth and last
thing) and the turning of the sense of David another way, is
plain already and evident by that which hath been said be-
fore ; we Avill say a little more on it yet. In his first tempta-
tion, he would have had stones turned into bread, but he him-
self here turns bread into stones, the bread of life, which is
the word of God, to be our bane and utter undoing.
For it is not therefore said, He shall give His Angels
charge over us, that in confidence of their protection we
should grate upon God's providence, and put both Him and
His Angels to base offices, to take us up as oft as we list to
fall down. The devil would make us believe, by his sense,
that if we be the sons of God, run into what needless danger
we will, He will never forsake us : the sense of the Psalm
only is, that using the means which He has appointed, we
shall run into no such danger but He will deliver us from
it ; from such dangers as cannot be prevented by man's care
and industr}', the Angels shall protect us, but otherwise not.
And therefore when Daniel is bound hand and foot and
Dan. 6.22. thrown iuto the lions' den, a danger that he was not guilty
of, then indeed it is a time for an Angel to take charge over
him, and to see that no hurt shoidd betide him. AVlien
Gen. 21. Hagar and Ishmael are rcadv to die for drink, then the
17 • • "
Angel's time is come to help them. So when there is no way
Ex. 11. 21. to pass, then will God divide the Red sea; and when no
bread is to be had for love nor money, then they shall have
Ps. 78. 25. Angels' food from heaven. And so if there had been no
ladder nor no stairs down the pinnacle, then we confess it
Ordinary means to be employed. 81
had been a fit time to have been carried down upon Angels'
wnigs.
But this is at a dead lift'^ as we say, and when tliere is no '"'i to-
other means, nor help left but this ; for otherwise let the ' ' ^'
stairs and the ordinary way be used, a God's name, what
should we do to cast ourselves away upon God's extraor-
dinary providence ? We read in the twentieth chapter of
Numbers, that in a place where no water was to be had,
there God would bring it out of a rock ; biit in the twenty- ver. 8.
first chapter, that where there was water, there every one
was to go to his digging, the princes of the people and all. ver. 18.
And in the Gospel, when the multitudes were ready to perish Mat. 14.
for hunger, and in a place where no meat was to be had, that ^'^ ' ^^•'^-•
then it was a time for Christ to work a mii'acle ; but after-
wards, when there was a town nigh, that He took the ordi-
nary way, and sent thither to buy bread ; that we may see Job. 4. s.
when God appoints a means, we must use it ; and M'hen there
is no means left, and our own endeavours will not help us,
Deus providebit de monte, His pro^idence and His Angels
shall be over us.
Now this is other manner of di\'inity fetched out of this
Psalm than the de\dl Avould have fetched out of it ; for by a
trick of concealment, he would have all this passed over, and
the words taken as he delivers them ; as if we were to look
for a miraculous providence to keep us, go we which way we
would. A rule to make us take heed of quoting or believing
the bare words of Scripture, unless we have the true sense of
it withal.
And be this much said also for the fourth point ; we pro-
pounded so many at first, and this was the last.
There are other things in the text too, that would have
somewhat said to them ; as, w^hat is meant by the Angels'
hands, and what by Christ's foot, and what by the stones,
and whether every man hath his Angel-keeper or no, to look
to him and protect him. But these things belong not so
properly to this place as to David's Psalms, where the Pro-
phet's whole intent is to tell us what safety and sure protec-
tion is provided for him that lives a godly hfe ; but here the
dcAdl's intent is to tell us, or to make lis believe at least,
what protection and safety is provided for him that lives an
COSIN. Q.
82 Application of the doctrine.
S E R M. uugodlv life : and lie re^rards not the circumstance so much
'- — in particular, as the whole scope of the Psalm in general, to
pervert that ; and therefore we are to keep us to tliis, and
not to deal with them here in this place.
So we have seen at large the cost which the devil bestowed
here upon this temptation of our Saviour. And what is this
to us now ? for he shall never have us up to a pinnacle, by
the grace of God we will keep oiu'selves upon the ground,
and never venture so high for a downfal. Literally we will
do so ; but spiritually, there we are on the top with him
every day ; and as he tempted Christ, so he talks with us out
of a Psalm of mercy still, making us believe (for if he did
Lu.23.31. this to a green tree, what will he not do to a dry?) that if
we be exalted in our minds, and have a will to leap into a
sin, we need make no more ado about it, for God is merciful,
and all will be well enough in the end ; tliat to take God's
troublesome way is too long and tedious ; that a jump, or a
cast over all is a nearer and a pleasanter way b}^ half ; and if
we fear any hurt, why God is our loving Father, and He
hath given His Angels charge over us, that if it be a sin
we fall into, they will take us out again time enough.
I sav no more, than what vou see every day done your-
selves, when men of all sorts are persuaded to follow the
de\il up one step of sin, and then another step, and yet
another, and stiU more till insensibly they come at the top ;
and when they are there they must not go down the stairs
again, according to God's appointment, fair and softly, with
fear and trembling, to work out their salvation as St. Paul
speaks; but walk on still, in the high ways of wickedness,
and, in hope of God's long-suffering, defer all till their
dying hour comes, and then, that it shall be enough to com-
mend their souls to the Angels and throw themselves upon
God's mercy, and all will be Avell. So says the dcAil ; Do so,
tarry there still, and never repent you for the matter; when
you begin to fall, ye shall but whistle for an Angel and he
will come at first, and carry you fair and softly upon his
wings ; or else he will bring' a fiery chariot with him, and
2 Kings 2. carry you up to heaven in a Avhirlwind, as he did Elias ; and
' ' he will carry you up \^'ith a Psalm too, ye shall have music
as ye go all the way up ye shall have a Psalm of mercy
God mingles justice with mercy. 83
sung, and what charge God liatli given His Angels over
you.
Now if ever the devil came in this likeness, he comes so
here, like an hypocritical pure devil, to tell us of the abund-
ance of mercy, for no other end but to plunge us into the
depth of misery. For to conclude all, (and it is a strange
thing I shall conclude withal,) the Psalms of mercy are deadly
Psalms, not so in themselves, but made so by the devil's
gloss ; and therefore there is no meddling with them, as
precious as they be otherwise, when we have no other inter-
preter by but him and his disciples. True it is that God's
mercv is over all His works, and that His mercy endureth Ps. 1 1,5. 9.
forever: and that He will deal with ns according to the l^^-^^^^^- !•
■
multitude of His mercies. But these sayings must not go pg. 51. 1.
alone, there are other sayings to be put into our Psalter, as
well as they ; and therefore we say in our prayers, that in all
om* troubles and adversities we may put our whole trust and
confidence in His mercy (not lea\'ing there, but going on),
and truly ser^^.ng Him in hohness and pureness of hving, to
the honour and glory of His name. And therefore there is
mercy with Thee, saith the Prophet ; for what ? that Thou Ts. 130. 4.
mavest be abused and grated on ? no, but that Thou mavest
be feared; and blessed are they that fear Thee, and put their Ts. 2. 12.
trust in Thy mercy. When they go both together, God's
mercy and our endeavours, they go right ; for David's Psalms
will sing of mercy and judgment, and we must look that not Ts. 101. 1.
mercy alone, but mercy and truth must meet together in us; Ps. 85. 10.
that if our Psalm-book sounds of nothing but mercy, and of
the charge of Angels, we may know who put it into our
hands. But if the truth be in us, we shall have mercy
shewed upon us ; and if we keep God's Avay in righteousness
and holiness, we shall have God's Angels to keep us, to keep
us in all His ways, till righteousness and peace kiss each Ps. 85. 10.
other, which will be in His eternal kingdom of peace. To
which kingdom He bring us, &c.
<; 2
A SERMON
AT THE
CONSECRATION OF DR. FRAXCIS ¥H1TE%
BISHOP OF CARLISLE,
CONSECRATED BY THE BISHOP OF
DURHAM, DR. XEILE^;
ROCHESTER, DR. BUCKERIDGE^
ST. DAVIDS, DR. FJELDd;
LLAXDAFF, DR. IMURRAY^ ;
BEFORE
THE COUNTESS OF DEMBIGHf,
MK. ENDYMION PORTER, OF THE KING'S BEDCHAMBER?,
MANY DEANS AND DOCTORS,
WITH FIVE HUXDKED PEBSOXS BESIDE.
THE SERTilCE EXECUTED BY JOHN COSDC, ARCHDEACON OF THE EAST RIDING IN YORK, THE SERMON
BY HIM PREACHED.
THE HYMNS AND PSAXMS SCXG SOLEMNLY BY THE CHOICE OF THE KING'S QUIRE, -VTITH THOSE OF
ST. PAUL ANT) WESTJnNSTER.
THE COMMUNION SER\TCE, AXD THE CONSECRATION, EXECUTED BY THE BISHOP OF DlTtHAM.
THE EPISTLE READ ■. , BY JOHN COSIN, ■,
THE GOSPEL RE.AD ) I^" '^^^ KING'S COPES | ^^ H. -mCKH.OI.h | ARCHDEACONS OF YORK.
THE OFFERTORY SOLEMNLY JIADE BY MORE TH.\N T\rENTY PERSONS, BISHOPS, DOCTORS, AND
OTHER DIVINES OF NOTE.
» [In January 162S-9, he was translated Wells in 16-26. In 1635 he was translated
to Norwich, vacant by the promotion of to Hereford, where he died Jnne 2, 1636.]
Samuel Harsnet to York, and in Dee. 8, « [Dr. William Murray, Bishop of Fe-
1631, he was removed to Ely, where he died nabore (?) in Ireland, succeeded to this
in February, 1638.] bishopric on the removal of Dr. Field to the
*• [Of Bishop Xeile, Cosin"s early friend see of St. Da\-id"s.]
and patron, a more minute account is given f [^lary, daughter of Sir George TUliers of
elsewhere.] Brokesby, and sister to George Villiers Duke
' [Dr. John Buckridge elected Bishop of of Buckingham; see Collins' Peerage, ii.
Eochester, Dec. 29, 1610, was translated to 252. ed. 1756, and Dugdale's Baronage, ii.
Ely in 1628. He died May 23, 1631, and 441.]
on the 31st of the same mouth he was buried = [He accompanied Charles in his excur-
in the parish church of Bromley in Kent.] sion to Spain. Heylin"s Life of Laud, p. 97.]
^ [Theophilus Field, Bishop of LlandafF, l" [Henry Wickham, Archdeacon of the
was elected to the see of St. David's on the West Riding of York, was collated March
translation of Laud to the see of Bath and 20, 1623-4. Le Neve's Fasti, p. 323.]
SERMON VI.^
DOMINICA I'KIMA ADVEXTIS, DECEMBRIS H, Kiil), AT THE CONSECRATION
OF THE UlSHOP OF CARLISLE IN UURUAM HOUSE CUAPEL, IN LONDON.
(Duv \)df jjtanlict]^ in t{)e name of tl)c Sort).
St. John xx. 21, 23.
Peace be unto you. As My Father sent Me, even so
send I you.
And ivhen He had spoken these words, He breathed on them and
said. Receive the Holy Ghost ;
Whose sins you do remit they are remitted, ^c.
[ Peace be unto you : as My Father hath sent Me, even so send
I you.
And when He had said this, He breathed on them, arid said unto them,
Receive ye the Holy Ghost.
JT'Tiosesoever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them ; and whose-
soever sins ye retain, they are retained.^
We are here tliis day about tlie consecration of a reverend
Ftither, and St. Paul tells us in one place that we are about a
good work; in another, that we are about an honourable iTim.s.i.
work ; St. John in this place, that we are about Christ^s own i Tim. 5.
work. Which Avork is the solemn deriAdng of a sacred and '•
ghostly power upon the persons of the holy Apostles^ for the
use and benefit of Christ^s Church ever after. We call it
the Power of the Keys, and those keys, Avhich, over and besides
them that are committed to the custody of a priest in his
^ [This is the only sermon to which made by the editor are inclosed withirj
Cosin has given notes and references to brackets.]
passages of Scripture. The additions
88 Importance of the text.
s E R M. ordination, to bind a sinful and to loose a penitent soul, are
'- — here given over, once for all, into the hands of bisliops ; the
key of order to send as Christ sent, and the key of jui'isdic-
tion to govern as He governed. A power that till this time
Chi'ist had kept, it seems, in His own hands, never parted
Mat. 16. with it till now ; promised it before, I will give you the keys*',
but gave them not till now; made His will before, but sealed
it not till now ; gave them many a very fair legacy, jVs ad rem,
as we say, when He chose them to be Ajjostles at first, but gave
them not livery and seisin yet, not jus in re, He put them
not into possession till noAv. And now He did it, we have
His hand and His seal for it ; His own words first, which He
spake here. As My Father sent Me, so send I you, (I trust we
will believe Him,) and then His own Spirit, in Quo signati
Eph.4..30. estis, saith St. Paul, to make His word good and to seal up
His saying, 'Eeceive the Holy Ghost.^
That if any the new Pharisees of our time, the elders of
the people, shall put the question to us, as they did to Christ,
Mat.21.23. and ask us, 'By what authority do ye these things? or who
gave you this authority V we will also ask them a question,
and let them answer us. This same sic and sicut here, can
they spell it ? Can they tell what as and so means ? if they
can, let them answer themselves.
For we say, with the consent of all, that this is the original
privy-warrant of ordering and of sending bishops into the
Church, that here it is first found, and here founded first too;
that to this very place we reduce the whole practice of the
Church for these fifteen hundred years and upwards, the
practice of the holy Apostles themselves, so often mentioned
in Scripture, a man would think, of purpose to let us know
how they understood this place ; that of the Acts, super quern
posuit vos episcopos, ' over which the Holy Ghost has made
Acts20.28. you bishops,' and, ' his bishopric let another man take,' and
Acts 1.20. again, that of St. Paul to Timothv, 'Stir up the gift that is
1 Tim a' "^ ^^^'^^^ ^^^' ^^^ imposition of my hands,' and again, 'lay
22. hands suddenly on no man,' that to Titus, 'for tliis cause
Tit. 1.5. have I set thee, that thou shouldest ordain priests;' all to
this head. For do but ask them what tc.\t thev had for
^ [' Jus ad rein,' right to a thing thing after possession. See Andrewes'
before possession ; 'jus in re,' riglit in a Sermons, vol. iii. p. 108.]
Division of the subject. 89
savincr as thcv did. and lather will thcv come. Our Saviour's
siciU must be theirs too, this their warrant, and no other.
To entreat of it then. The heads arc divers. And now
I am about to divide the text, St. Paul puts a word into my
movith, that will help us to order it and to divide it aright.
He says that he and his fellow Apostles had a commission to
be ambassadors for Christ ; and under the notion we can best 2Cor.5.20.
tell what to make of this text, for here was their commission
and theii" embassage drawn up for them at large.
Ambassadors are men commonly that must have some
special quality in them above other peo})lc ; their treaties are
ordinarily for concord, and therefore above all other things
they should be peaceable men.
The quality and disposition, then, wdiich Christ requires
here in ambassadors to be our first part, and this out of the
first words of the text, ' Peace be unto you,' set there, as it
seems, as a preparative to their mission, and a condition re-
quisite before they could be sent; for whatsoever other
ambassadors be, Christ's must be sure to be peaceable men.
(2.) Our second point to be their mission, Mitto vos, '\
send you.' For be it that men are never so fitly and so ably
disposed, yet unless they be sent, and have letters of credence
with them, they can be no ambassadors ; step up of their
ow^n head and run they may not, but expect a mission.
(3.) A mission these had, and a commission too, that to
be our third part ; the nature and authority of their mission,
which the sicut and the sic here gives us, such another as
Christ had from His Father, ' as My Father sent Me.' These
three in the first verse.
In the next, (4.) the enabling of them to perform and
execute their commission ; in other commissions it goes by
putting to the seal, in this also by putting upon them the
seal of the Holy Ghost, and this to be our fourth point,
' Receive the Holy Ghost.'
(5.) Which was given here, as most an end such great
commissions are, with a ceremony ; the ceremony used was a
blast of Christ's breath, ' He breathed upon them, and said,
lleceive;' that to be another, a fifth point. The last being but
one part of His great commission, a pow' er of the Holy Ghost
to remit and retain sins, which in one sense is communicable
90 Force of the eocpress'ion ' Peace be unto you.'
s E R M. to Priests^ but in another is casus reservatus, kept proper and
'- — peculiar to Bisliops only. These are the parts ; you see they
depend all upon the Holy Ghost, which is the earnest and the
seal of all.
Now, because there is no speaking, nor hearing neither, of
Ilim without His assistance, no discom-sing of His gift of the
Spirit without the Spirit itself, I shall therefore desire you
that we may call upon God the Father, in the name and
mediation of God the Son, for the aid and help of God the
Holy Ghost, and that with meek lieart, &c.
THE BIDDING OF THE COMMON PRAYERS OF THE CHURCH.
Pater nosier Qui es in coelis, ^-c.
(I.) We begin as the text begins, and as Christ began once
Lu. 24.36. before this, with the preparative to their mission, ' Peace be
unto you,^ Avhich I know well by many frigid and common *=
expositors is taken for no more than an ordinary salutation
among the Jews; by the best and more ancieuf^for a higher
and deep mysteiy, as being well assured that Christ came
not here among His Apostles a-visiting only, to spend away
His time by seeing how they did, and so bid them good
morrow; but that His coming was for greater matters, to
leave that peace first which He had so lately piu'chased
betwixt God and man among men themselves, and then to
leave that power which God had bestowed upon Him for the
benefit of His Church for ever.
Before He puts the Apostles then, into any other commis-
sion. He puts them first here into the commission of peace.
Before He gives them the Spirit of peace. He will have order
taken that they be peaceably given first, and when they are
so fitted for Him they shall receive Him. Thus was way
made for the gift of the Spirit then ; and look, as His former
gift was, so Avill His after-gift be too ; as He was given here,
Epli. 4. o. so He must and will be given still; the Spirit of unity to
* [Erasmus and other commentators 1282.]
who advocated this 'frigid' interpreta- ^ [Various passages to this purpose
tion, are enumerated and refuted in a are collected from the writings of the
dissertation ])rintcd iu 1758, by C. G. F. Greek Fathers by Suicerin his Thesaur.
Waleh, which is quoted by Koecher in i. l()o2.]
his Analecta in Quatuor Evangelia, p.
The Church the home of peace. 1) 1
them tliat keep the unity of the Spu-it, aud the Author of
Peace to them that arc maiutaiiiers of the bond of peace.
For otherwise the ordination that some men get among us,
it is somewhat inordinate, and well may they get an impres-
sion of the Spii'it, a free grace, as we say, to do others good;
but spirit get they none nor grace to do themselves any. It
is the care and wisdom of our Chm'ch^ therefore, and so it has
been in all antiquity, before any man be ordained a priest, or
consecrated a bishop, to put this question to him, ' AVill you
maintain quietness and peace among all Christian people® V
As much to say as, unless you promise this^ you can have no
Holy Ghost here, see an ye can get Him among them that
are enemies to peace ; for with us, the bishop is to give Him
upon this condition, or otherwise to suspend his office. That
they now who cry us up ' No peace,' and ' No moderation,'
that curse the peacemakers and bless them that keep the
rents of the Church from being made up^, I wonder where
they had their orders, or of whose sending they were. For
Christ and His Church are for peaceably-minded men ; His
Spirit for men of a calmer temper. For such unquiet messen-
gers and such unpeaceable people Ave may sing, ' Come, Holy
Spu'it^,' long enough; sing it and say it too, as they use to do
before eveiy sermon^, and yet the Holy Spirit come down
ne'er a Avhit the faster. The reason is, they are not reason-
able men ; they are fomenting the factions on both sides, and
they hate the very name of peace on all sides ; whereas His
coming must ever be, as here it was, to them that are studious
of peace and lovers of concord. And now who should look
to this peace more than they that are consecrated for it ?
whose office it is to mark and to rebuke them that sow dis-
sensions among us, to practise as the Chui'ch prays, and to do Rom. 16.
their utmost endeavom's that all Christians may agree in the ^^-
truth of God's holy Word, aud live in unity and godly love.
In so doing what thanks they shall have here, as this world
goes now, I cannot tell ; but high shall their reward be in
^ Ordination Service, [question pro- •> [This custom appears to liave
posed by the bishop in the ' Ordering crept into the Church. In a copy of
of Priests.'] the Prayer-Book printed in 1728, is a
' [See Heylin's History of the Pres- metrical version of tliis Hynm, whicli
byterians, book xi. § .31. p. 393.] i? directed to be sung before sermon.]
s Part of the Oidination Service.
92 Necessity of a mission.
S E R M. heaven, and their honour great among the Saints, that here
'■ — love and labour for the peace of Christ^s Chiu'ch'. And so I
proceed,
(II.) Having for our next point an orderly proceeding liere,
that they stepped not up of their own heads and bishoped
themselves, but had One to put them into office, were sent,
and had a mission ; for there are that run, and I sent them
Jer. 23.32. not, saitli God in Jeremiah ; a sort"^ of forward men that are
crept into office, nobody knows how, and so overweening of
their own worth that the Church shall never need to trouble
herself for the matter, to call them, or to send them, for they
are upon their journey long ago ; they sent themselves, and
can preach, order, rule and govern, or do any thing ye will
have them do, better than all the mitred bishops Avith their
Letters Missive' in their hands, and better than all the priests,
scribes, and pharisees in the world besides. Was it thus of
old, troAV ? might men run God^s errands before they had
their errand given them, or could well tell what to say?
might they shuffle themselves into the High-Priest's office, be
meddling with mysteries before they could well tell how to
Ex. 25. 38. use the very snuffers of the Temple? nor this, nor that? Ad
2Cor.2.i6. ]i(2c quis idoneus, then? and Mitte quern missurus es, but here
^ ^' ■ ' was a mission howsoever. ' There was a man sent from God,'
Jolm 1. 6. _
saitli St. John the Evangelist of St. John the Baptist; he
came not of his own authority; et ordincwerimt seipsos in
minisieritim sanctum, is such a solecism in di^dnity, that I
suspect the Latin in the vulgar translation of St. Paul, as I
do their honesty that gulled the too-credulous Papists with
a tale, and falsely here accused us, in the beginning of the
late Queen's reign, that our bisliops had then no lawful suc-
cession, no orderly consecration, but laid one another's hands
upon their heads, and so made themselves bisliops ; not, ' I
send you,' or ' The Holy Ghost sends you,' but ' Let us rise
up from table and send one another,' which the Public
Records of those times™ can tell us, and this day's solemnity
' [See Andrewes' Sermons, iii. 113.] vacant See; Gibson's Codex, i. 109.]
*• [' A sort,' i. e. a company ; see the "" In the archbishop's retristry. [See
fifth sense of the word in Jolmson.] Courayer's Defence of English Ordina-
' [Letters ^lissive sent by the King tions, i.29; Hranihall's Works, p. 1051.
to the Dean and Chapter of a Cathedral linrnel's Hist. Keform., Appendix i.
Church directing them to fill up the ;](J3.]
That mission fi'om Christ Himself. 93
shall tell us again, is as true as if the father of lies had said
it and sent it into the world ; or as true as another report
they have, in print too", that we bound their bishops and
priests to mangers, and fed them with hay like horses. ]?ut
there let them stand and devise such mischievous fables of a
Church which deserves them not ; which ever held firm (aiul
we are able to make it good) in a continued line of succession
from former known bishops, and so from this very mission of
tlic Apostles.
I had now done with their sending if I had once told you
of "^^Hiose sending they were, and of Whom they held their
authority. It was of Christ. He sent them, and He had
power enough ; all power in heaven and in earth was given Mat. 28.
Him. Of Him they held it, and of Him we hold it ever ^'
since. The bishop imposes hands, but God gives the grace,
saith St. Ambrose", of Whom we depend immediately for the
power of our orders, and are subordinate to no power besides.
I speak not of the execution, which I know bishops may
suspend; but of the power of order itself, Avhich none can
take away when it is once given. Neither did any bishop
ever challenge more, acknowledging themselves but ministers
of Christ's ])ower, unless it were he that came, not (it seems) Mat. 20.
28
to minister, but to monarch it over the world, and heP
forsooth, will have us hold of him, that unless he sends us,
all the power that Christ and His Apostles had, Avill do us
no good. Without his licence we are neither bishops nor
priests ; and whereas other bishops are content to be masters
of the ceremonies only, he must be master of the substance
too. For ye must know that Christ had but all power in
heaven and in earth. Make we a ' but' of it ? Yes, there
was a fellow who preached it before the Council of Lateran^
for good Catholic-Roman doctrine, that the Pope had more ;
that he had a power above all power in heaven and in earth ;
and therefore he to do with order, and power, and jurisdic-
" [See Parsons' Three Conversions, buit dignitatem. 0pp. S. Ambros.
i. 252. edit. 1C04.] Append^ ad torn. ii. col. 363. Tliis
" Ambr. de Dign. Sac. c. 5. [Sed treatise is improperly ascribed to St.
tamen per hominem dat Deus; homo Ambrose.]
imponit maniis, Deus largitur gratiam; p [See Ant. De Dominis, Rep. Eccl.
sacerdos imponit supplicem dexteram, ii. v. § 13, 1 !■, 15.]
et Deus benedicit potenti dextera ; i Bin., tom. iv. p. 651'. [See Jewell's
episcopus initiat ordinem, et Deus tri- Works, P. i. p. 365. edit. 1609.]
94 The mission of the Apostles.
S E R M. tiou, and Clmrcli too, what he list himself; the main quarrel
'■ — (though God knows, a very unjust quarrel) betwixt him and
us at this day; and no peace must be had unless we will hold
all of him. But then must we go mend our text here ; for
if so, Christ was properly to have said, not, I send you all,
but, I send St. Peter, and let him send the resf^. Enough
to let you see the vanity of his claim and the iniquity of liis
quarrel. Let the world judge then, where the schism hes ;
for we haA'e our mission from Christ as well as he. And so
from the mission and the nature of it I will come to their
commission and the nature of it ; for eveiy one that is sent,
is not sent with a like commission, which is our third point.
(III.) The Apostles then were sent, as all other bishops and
priests are. "What commission have they with them ? For
at large they are not sent, either to teach and to govern as
they list themselves, but they have a sicut and a sic with
them to keep all right. ' As My Father sent ]Me, so send I
you.^
We demand then, How was Christ sent? And He was
sent for two ends. The first, to be the Redeemer of our
souls, and to reconcile God unto men, which He did by His
1 Pet. 2.25. death; the second, to be the Bishop of our souls, and to
reconcile men unto God, which He did by leaving us a
Gospel, His life and doctrine, in a Church behind Him^. In
the first sense the Apostles were not sent, they were to be
no redeemers nor mediators neither. For it cost more to
redeem men's souls, and both thev and their successors must
Ps. 40. 8. let that sicut alone for ever. And yet there is a sicut simili-
tudinis in it for all that, though there be no sicut cequalitatis,
there is some likeness in theu" sendiugs this way. He, sent
by His Father to be a Mediator for mankind, and to recon-
cile the world by His death and sacrifice upon the cross.
They, sent by Him, to mediate and to pray for the people, to
2Cor.5.l8. be ministers of the reconciliation, as St. Paul speaks, and in
a manner, to be sacrificers too, representers at the Altar
here, and appliers of the Sacrifice once made for all ; Avithout
which last act, the first will do us no good*.
■■ [See Ant. de Doniinis tie Repuh- ' [The diflerence between tlic mission
lica Eccles. II. v. § 3, and the refer- of our Lord and that of His disciples is
ences there given.] pointed ont by De Dominis in his
' [See De Dominis, V. i. § 1. scqf].] Repub. Eccl. I. v. § 2.]
The mission of our Saviour. 95
But theu in the second sense more properh^ And liere the
sicut runs many ways ; we will choose them only which are
the chiefs and for which the Scripture is plain, Christ was of
purpose sent,
(1.) Fii-st then, Christ was sent to preach the Gospel to the Lu.4.[i8.]
poor ; and of the same errand are His Apostles and bishops
sent, ' Go ye and teach all nations/ The priests' office not Mat. 28.
so large, who preach too, but yet under the bishop's licence '-^^■-'
only; they then to be the great pastors of the diocese, and we
but as servants and substitutes under them, to preach by
their commission and not by our own. For by m-tue of our
orders we are only put to offer up the prayers and sacrifices
of the Church, to administer the Sacraments, to bind and to
loose, and not to preach unless we be thereunto appointed,
says the book. And indeed, so went the old canons and the [The Or-
stories of the ancient Church. For canons I name the Sixth '^"'^t'°''
service. J
in Trullo", and the decree of ''Damasus the pope, one whom
St. Jerome made much esteem of>', that otherwhiles presbyters
were not to preach at all, as Balsamon' there observes of
them in Alexandria^. For stories I name Sozomen^ and
Nicephorus'^, and St. Chrysostom hiraseLf*, that was much
troubled about it, and would fain have given over preaching
(as in his second Homily upon Esay), when he saw the
" [Can. sis. ap. Labb. Cone. vi. ficibus deberi, tani ex superioribus qnam
1136.] ex aliis patrum constitutis, aut sacris
* [The following passage from the canonibus, edocti estis. Epist. Damasi
decretal epistle of pope Damasus, Papaj, ap. Labb. Cone. ii. 879.]
alhuled to by tlie author, so fully y [St. Jerome dedicated his book on
enumerates the functions peculiar at the Prodigal Son to pope Damasus ;
that time to the Episcopate, that it see lib. ii. cont. Jovin. cap, 17.]
may be cited at length. Quod vero eis ^ [See Beveridge's Pandectae, i.
non liceat sacerdotes consecrare, nee 278.]
diaconos aut subdiaconos, nee virgines, = [On this peculiarity of the Church
nee altare eiigere, nee ungere aut of Alexandria (which however appears
sacrare, nee ecelesias dedicare, nee to have been limited to the period when
chrisma conficere, nee chrismate bap- it was disturbed by the preaching of
tizatorum frontes signare, nee publice Arianism) see Bingham, II. iii. § 4.
quideminmissaquemquampoenitentem and XIV. iv. § 3.]
reconciliare, necformatasepistolas mit- ^ Sozom. 1. vii. c. 19. [p. 307. edit,
tere, nee populum benedicere, nee ante Reading, 1720. H. Valesius in his note
episcopum in baptisterio aut in sacrario upon tliis passage attempts to throw
introire, nee praesente episcopo infantem discredit upon the statements which are
tingere aut signare, nee poenitentem advanced in it, as far as the bishops of
sine prseeeptione episcopi sui recon- Rome are concerned. ]
ciliare, nee eopra?sente, nisi illo jubente *-• Niceph. 1. xii. c. 34. [See the note
sacramentum Corpoiis et Sanguinis of H. Valesius to Sozomen, vii. 19. p.
Christi conficere, nee eo coram posito 308. edit. Reading.]
populum docere aut salutare, nee pie- ** St. Chrysost. Hom. 2. in Isai. [vi.
hem exhortari; quae omnia solis ponti- 111. edit. Bened.]
96 Objects of our Saviour's mission.
s E R M. bishop come into the churchy he being then but a priest^. Good
— — — men ; they thought priests had a deal to do besides, to say
their hours, to sing their ser%dce, to visit the sick, to reconcile
penitents, and not to preach so much, though they neglected
not this neither : but then it was when the bishop set them
a-work, when he was otherwise employed, and could not so
often attend it ; for there must be preaching howsoever. I
would not be mistaken, I come not here to preach down
preaching ; but this I wonder at, that preaching now-a-days
should be counted our only office, as if we had nothing else
to do, and an office independent too, as if we were all
bishops when we preach. But let them preach, they have
licence perhaps to do it.
Then would both bishops and they be put in mind of a
second sicut here, that we may keep us to the text.
(2.) For secondly, Christ was sent, as the Scripture many
times tells us, not to preach His own "will, but His Father's ;
.Toh. 12. 'As My Father said unto Me, so I speak.' Nor were the
' "^ Apostles sent to preach what they would themsehes, but
Mat. 28. whatsoever Christ had commanded them ; that they, which
'■ '^ preach as voluntary as the organ plays, or the sudden
motions of a spirit, as their fancy leads them that call it
speaking by the Spirit when never a Avise word is spoken,
and they which preach us up new doctrines, or a new faith,
which was never heard on since the world began afore, may go
seek some other commission to make good what they do, for
from Christ here have they none.
(3.) Christ was sent to preach a law, as we read in the
[Ps. 2. 7.] second Psalm ; ' I will preach the law whereof the Lord spake
unto Me ;' and they that are sent by Him are sent to make
men observe a law and to do what He hath commanded. If
we love not to hear of a law, of a working and a doing
religion, we must go to some other Chiu'ch, for in Christ's
Church men are to preach us a law, set us somewhat to do,
and hold us or keep us in with a law ; that they now which
preach us all Gospel and put no law among it, bisliops and
priests that will tell the people all is well if they can but say
their Catechism and hear sermons, make them believe that
there is nothing to be done more but to beheve and so be
e [See Bingh. ii. 3, 4; and xlv. ■!•. 2. fov illustrations of this position.]
Objects of ojir Saviour's mission. 97
saved, these men, tlioy preach by some other pattern sure,
for Christ, lie is sent not to preach down the old Law so
mucli as to preach up a new^ Now^ to make men observe
and do wliat the Clmrch teaches them is, or shoukl be, in
the bishop's hands. AYe suffer scandal from them of the
Church of Rome in many things, in nothing more than this,
that we are sent to preach sermons to the people, as men
that had some pretty commodities to sell them which, if they
liked, they might buy and use ; if not, they might let them
alone ; that we talk of devotion but live like the careless ;
that we have a service, but no servants at it ; that we have
churches, but keep them not like the honses of God; that
we have the Sacraments, but few to freqiient them; Confes-
sion, but few to practise it ; finally, that we have all religious
duties (for they cannot deny it), but seldom observed ; all
good laws and canons of the Church, but few or none kept ;
the people are made to do nothing ; the old discipline is
neglected, and men do what they list^. It should be other-
wise, and our Church intends it otherwise; (enough to free
her from slander, let them condemn them that will not obey
her,) but enough to free her, and to stir up men, specially
them whom it concerns, to make others active, for therefore
are thev sent, even as Christ also was.
(4.) And to make this take the better effect, we say, fourthly,
that Christ was sent to preach by His own life, and to give
an example to others, exemphim cledi vobis, which is the best Joh.is.u.
kind of preaching, when all is done ; that they which stand
like idols and statues, to point out the way to others, and
yet stir not themselves to lead the way, they are by this very
mark known to be none of Christ's ambassadors.
(5.) And now I come to another sicut ; sicut oves, saith
Christ, 'Behold I send you as sheep among wolves/ As Mat. lo.
sheep among Avolves? Now above all other sicuts, let us
have none of that. For will the comparison hold here too,
trow" we ? Yes, Christ was sent so Himself, sicut oris, saith the
Prophet, as a sheep to the slaughter, and sicut ar/nus inter is. 53. 7.
lupos, as a lamb among the wolves. A lesson this which vaj
lord bishop of Rome hath, it seems, long ago forgot, for he
has turned the text now quite another way and made it run
' [See Jewell's AVorks, p. 1,51. and his View of a Seditious Bull, p. 13.]
COSIN. jj
98 Dignity of the priesthood.
S E II M. backwards, sicMt lupus inter aynos, comes lie like a wolf among
'- — the sliecp that is ready to devour them, and like a lion among
the lambs that is greedy of his prey. Christ came not so,
and the Apostles came not so. I wonder of whose sending
he should be that comes after this manner.
But if the pope on the one side has forgotten how St. Peter
was sent, there are the common people on the other side that
will remember it well enough, how he and all the rest were
sent ; and they mean, it seems, to take an order for it that
their successors shall never be sent otherwise, never but as
sheep among wolves. Let us be sheep and they will be sure
to be wolves, keen enough to prey upon the Church, and to
prey upon churchmen too, leave them by their good will
neither goods nor good name behind them. We know the
world has stvulied this text well, and though they keep never
a saying of Christ's besides, yet will they be sure to keep this ;
since Christ has said it, they will take Him at His word ; we
shall be sheep still, and they will be wolves. Christ told the
[Mat. 5. clergy that tliev were the salt of the earth, and the Avorld has
■-' taken Him; because He has said it, it shall be made good;
account made of us as of salt indeed ? a poor contemptible
thing, salt, ye may buy enough of it for a farthing. This is
their jest; but as contemptible as it is, ye can savour nothing
without it, and this is our answer. But what do I pleading
for account, or for any good words from the world, whenas
Christ here has bidden us look for none beforehand ; not but
that we should have them, but because we are never like to
have them. Men speak well of their clergy ? No. There is a
Mat. .'3. 1 1 . saying of His which spoiled that long ago, ' They shall speak
all manner of e\\\ against vou ;' and so they do. I know no
saying in all the Bible studied better than this. But since
Christ was willing to bear it, we must be content to endure
it too. In the meanwhile we would desire all men to re-
member whose ambassadors they are that are thus used;
assuring them that any, the least injury done to them, reflects
upon Clirist their Lord and JNIaster.
(6.) "Who, to make them amends for this, hath not sent
them without another sicut, a sicut of honour and dignity,
whereas He sent them to be the ambassadors of God and the
di.spcnsers of His saci'od mvstcries. This shall be the last.
The three orders of the Church Catholic. 99
In priests this to consecrate tlic Sacrament and to meddle
with tlie keys; but I meddle not with them, as being not
proper for the day. In bishops [ojms diei) to send, ordain,
and govern otlicrs, as He sent and governed them. For it
was the High-Piicst of old and not the presbytery ; it is the
bishop now and not the vestry-man, nor the priest neither,
that hath authority to put into the priesthood, or to give any
orders at all. It is the fulf consent of reverend antiquity to
distinguish the ministers of the Gospel into^ three degrees,
answerable to the triple order under the Law, as servants to
the same Trinity, the God both of Law and Gospel. There
are bishops, successors to the Apostles, answerable to the
High-Priest, presbyters succeeding the seventy disciples,
answerable to the priests ; and deacons, instituted by the
Apostles, answerable to the levites. I gather then, that
as the putting into the priest's office was penes Pontificem, i Sam. 2.
in the Iligh-Priest^s power alone, so the consecration of^^'^"'^
bishops, the ordination of priests and deacons, and the
putting of them into office or place within the Church, was,
and is, in the authority and jurisdiction of bishops only,
wlio are the height and the princes of the clergy, as Optatus^
said, and said it from Ignatius', the oldest Father that is,
and St. John's own scholar '^ If Fathers would do it, we
could bring two juries of them; but this place is clear, and
St. Paul is clear, what need we any more witnesses ? Propter
hanc causam, 'for this cause,' saith St. Paul to Titus, 'have I Tit. 1. 5.
set thee in Ci'cte' (not any body else) ' that thou shouldest
ordain presbyters.' Neither is there any one example to be
found in all the stories of the Church of any holy orders that
were ever given but by a bishop. I will shew you all that
may be found. There was an old Arian heretic, they called
him Ischyras', a fellow suborned by a faction to accuse
Athanasius in the great Council of Nice, and he was ordained
a priest indeed by Coluthus an imaginary bishop ; but be-
cause it was afterwards proved that the one was no bishop,
g [Bingh. Orig. Eccl. ii. 20. § 1.] confusion between what is recorded of
h [Optat. p. 15. edit. Paris. 1(J79 ; Polycarp and Ignatius.]
see also Bingh. Orig. Eccl. ii. 2. § 4.] ' Athanas. in 2. Apolog. [i. 193. edit.
> [En. ad Magiies. § 6 ; ad Ephes. fol. Par. 1()98. see also Bingh. ii. 3.
§ 2; ad Trail. § 13, &c.] § 6 ; and Petavius de Etcle.-. Hierarch.
'' [There hure appears to be a slight II. x. §. 10.]
H
O
100 Presbyterian ordination always rejected.
S R R M. the Council concluded that the other was no priest, and so
^ — put them both oft' with contempt and scorn. Tliis was one.
There is but another example to be had, and it is out of the
second Council of Seville"', where the priest takes upon him
to give orders like a bishop ; yon shall see what came of it.
The priest dies presently, or they had met Avith them ; and
his imagi}iarv clergy-men Avere by that council turned back
again to their laA'-brethren Avith shame enough.
Yet starts me up Aerius", and he would have bishops and
priests to be all one, held for so holding as little Ijetter than
mad; but ye should have given him a bishopric, saith St.
Austin", and then the heretic woidd have been quiet. For-
sooth bishops and priests p had otherwhiles been both one
name; so had bishops and angels^' too, Avere they therefore
both one order ? I may call the bishop a priest Avhen he con-
secrates the Sacrament, and the priest a bishop Avhen he looks
to his charge ; but AA'hat makes this to the poAver of ordina-
tion? Cum de re constat, qui fit de nomine jyuyna 7 Let the
priests submit themselves then, saith St. Ignatius'^, it is none
of theirs ; they Avere not sent for this purpose.
And if not they, much less the consistory, and the verdict
of the A^estry, to Avliom they say the Spirit is lately gone, and
dej)arted from the whole Church besides. But I will not
here vouchsafe to confute them, not to name them, more than
Jude 8. that they are a tumultuous faction, and despise dominions,
and speak evil of dignities ; and that we own them not.
To the bishops' poAA'er of ordaining then add their poAver
1 Cor. 11. of setting Church matters in order by virtue of St. PauFs
ordinaho cetera ; their votes in council, by virtue of that in
Acts 1.5. the Acts; their poAver to correct, depriAC, suspend, excom-
129 '""3 .
\i^^\ ^ ' municate, and stop the mouths of offenders, specially of those
that speak perverse things and draAV disciples after them, by
[Tit.2. 15, virtue of the Apostle's charge to Timothy; and then you
&c.]
" Cone. Ilisp. 2. [Can. 5. Rclatum levitici ordinis, quern perverse adepti
est nobis dc qiiilmsdam clericis, quoriun sunt, amittunt. See further, Bingli. ii.
dum luius ad presbyteruni, duo ad levi- 3. § 7.]
tarum niinisteriuni sacrarentur, cpisco- " Epiphan. H^r. 75. [§ 5. edit,
pus oculoruni dolore detentus fertur Petavii. fol. Colon, p. 909.]
maiium suam super eos tantum impo- » Aug. de Ha?r. 5-3. [0pp. viii. 11.]
Suisse, et presbyter quidcm illis contra p [See Bingh. ii. 19. § 2.]
ecclesiasticuin ordinem benedictionem <! [See Bingh. ii. 2. § 11.]
dedisse .... Hi gradum sacerdotii vel '" [Epist. ad Ephes. § 4.]
Value and meaning of ceremonies. 101
have their full commission with all the stents and extents of
it, draAvn np at large. And now it wants nothing bnt the
seal, which we will set to with expedition, and make an
end.
It folloAvs then, 'When lie had spoken these words lie
breathed on them and said, Receive the Holy Ghost/
(lY.) Where we begin with the ceremony. For here is a
Spirit given, and given by another spirit, Spiritus Sanctus per
spiritum oris, the Holy Spirit by the spirit and breath of
His mouth.
No doubt but Christ (an it had pleased Him) might have
given them the Spirit Avithout any breathing upon them at all ;
the substance without the ceremony. And had He so done He
had got some men's hearts by it for ever, which now He is
like to lose ; theirs, that condemn all ceremonies in religion
for vanity and superstition.
Now much pity it was that these ceremony-haters of our
days had not then been living and standing by, to advise and
to put Christ in mind what a foundation He would lay here
for superstition and popery, and how miuch better it had been
to have made no more ado but to have come, as tliej^ use to
do, with the Spirit only, and so be gone. Yet thus it was
not ; it was as St. John here has written it, and they cannot
all tell how to help it; Christ would have a ceremony as well
as the Spirit ; and the truth is, lie did seldom or never any
great act without a ceremony.
Christ would have it, and have it He v/ould for some good
purpose sure. His purpose was to have it signify somewhat ;
to be no idle ceremony, but significant, as indeed all cere-
monies must be®, tliough for this very cause they are so much
misliked, because forsooth, we make them significant; whereas
if we should not make them so, they must needs be (as they
Vi'ould have them to be) vain and frivolous indeed. For
ceremonies, take them where ye will, let them be destitute of
signification and instruction, and what are they else but the idle
gestures of men, whose broken Avits are not masters of what
they do? Themselves, have they not a ceremony to lift up
the eye-lid as if they were lifting up a pound weight ? and
they say it is to signify the heaviness of the heart. V\c beseech
» [Hooker, E. V., v. § Go. Keble's edit. ii. 40f).]
102 Why Christ breathed on His Apostles.
S E R M. them then tluit they woukl let our ceremonies be significant
'- — too ; and this for one, that Christ breathed npon His
Apostles.
Significant? of what? The Fathers shall tell us'. St.
Austin, that it signified the procession of the Holy Ghost, to
be from Christ Himself the Son, as well as from God the
Father. Athauasius", and St. Cyril ^, that it signified Christ
to be Him, Who at the first breathed life into man, the
Creator and the Re-creator, both one God ; St. Ambrose 5^, that
as without the breath there is no natural life, so without the
Spirit there is no heavenly ; St. Basil 2, that the Spirit begins
with a breath and comes on with a M'ind, not boisterous at
first and feeble afterwards, as we use to be. All these are
good. I Avill be bold to add a fifth, as in those cases we may,
that Christ breathed upon them here to shew that otherwise they
might have been soon out of breath to have nm this embas-
sage over the world ; that it was not in the power of man, nor
[2 Cor. 10. in the breath of his nostrils (God knows) to throw down those
■-' strong holds of the de^il which they were now to encounter,
but that by the Spirit of the Lord and the breath of His
mouth it must be done.
Here are significations enough; but we shall stick to
St. Austin's, as the Church most an end hath used to do
about the procession of the Holy Ghost from the Person of
God the Son ; which is the reason that never after this was
there any more breathing to be used by the Church, for that
neither Spirit nor spiritual authority proceeds from men as
lords and authors of it, but was changed to imposita or aclmota
manus, to the lifting up or laying on of their hands, who are
' [Flatus ergo ille corporeus sub- '^ [MrjSels oSj/ x^piCfVo) rrjv -KaXaiav
staiitia SpiriUis Sancti noii fuit, sed anh ttjs Kaivi]s SiaSrjK-rjs" /x7j^€is Ae-yeVw
denionstratio per congruam sigiiifica- (iVt a\Ko rh ■n-vev/.i.a tKei, Kal &\\o wSe.
tionem iion tantum a Patre sed etiam a S. Cyrill. Hieros. p. 244. edit. Par.
Filio procedere Spirituni Sanctum. S. 1720.]
August, de Trin. ii. ap. Thorn. Aquin. >' [Ergo mundus non habebat vitam
Cat. Aur. ad Job. 20. 22. Insufflando asternam, quia non acceperat Spiritum,
significavit Spiritum Sanctum non Pa- ubi autem Spiritus, ibi vita teterna.
tris solius esse Spiritum, sed et Suum. S. Ambros. dc Spiritu Sancto, cap. 2.
Tract, in S. Job. III. ii. 589. ed. § 27. Opp. ii. fiSf), edit. Benedict.]
Benedict.] ^ [Avrh {■Ki/evfj.a) S( icrriv ael, TTTj-yj;
" [. . . KOi Tov ■KvevfiaTos 5e 5i5o- ot'Tfjs ai'Si'ou ^ojrjs; . . . TrpocriTco Se ^trux^
/xevov els riiJ.as, \a0€T€ yap TTi/fv/xaaytov, rfj Karaffrafffi. Tfiffvxov Si avrrjs effru,
iKfjiv o "Zwrjip, 6 0605 T)ixiv eariv, .... /xyj jxovov rh irfpiKelfMevov acvua, Kal 6
(oanroiovixfi'uiv 5e ri/.i.u)i> (v Tif irvfiifxari, rou ffdo/xaros k\vS(i}i/, aWa Kal irav rh
(fiv avThs & XpiffThs eV v/J-lv Afyerai. S. -mpUxov. S. Basil, adv. Eunom. 0pp. i.
Athanas. i. ()(i7, (3()8. edit. J'nris, 1698.] 320, 321. edit. Bencd.]
Nature of the (jift communicated. 103
but God's delegates and assigns to give men possession of
His graces.
(V.) Euoiigli of the ceremony, I come now to the sub-
stance, the Holy Ghost that was here given and received;
whereof, because I said much myself here the last year, I will
tell you now what another most an end has said of them, to
better purpose than any else can say% and so make an end.
And one note we shall have from the word ' Received,^ that
it was not a spirit, spirltus transiens, but remanens et implens, [J^nArcwcs
afterwards; not a hot breath of furious zeal that blew upon iii.'p.'i'y."]
their faces, and presently went off again, nor a cold breath of
frozen religion that blew through them, as I know not how
it does through a good many of us; but a breath and a Spirit
that went into them, and tarried with them, wrought upon
their very hearts and converted them, a Spirit which they
received.
Now you will understand of yourselves that when we speak
of receiving the Spirit, It is not*" (as the complainers of our
■Form to the Parliament would have it) the essence or the
person of the Holy Ghost that is meant ; heaven and earth
cannot receive That, and no power can give It : but there is
meant by it certain impressions of the Holy Ghost, gifts and
graces which the Spirit of God doth bestow, and whereby he
that receiveth the office is warranted for ever (as Leo speaks'')
to have the Spirit with him for his aid and support in what
thing soever he shall faithfully undertake to discharge its
duties.
In such sense, then, is the Holy Ghost received in our
ordinations. In that of priesthood for their office, and in this
of bishops for theirs too ; not that both their orders are one,
but that both proceed from one Spirit; noAV there are
divers degrees of gifts, saith St. Paul, and but one Spirit, i Cor. 12.4.
" [Reference is here made to certain quoniam qui mihi oneris est auctor,
passages in the Sermons of Bishop ipse fiet administrationis adjutor; et
Andrewes, which are indicated above ne sub magnitudine gratiae succumbat
in the margin.] infirnius, dabit virtutem, qui contulit
*> [See Hooker's E. P., v. 77. § 5. dignitatem. Bibl. Patr., torn. v. Part. ii.
Keble's edit, ii. 585. and the passages p. 791. edit. 1618. This passage ap-
there quoted in the notes.] pears to have been borrowed from
" S. Leo Serm. 1. in Annunc. [Serm. Hooker's E. P., v. 77. § 8. Keble's
1. in Anniv. die Assumpt. Unde etsi edit. ii. 589, where it is quoted, and
necessarium est trepidare de merito, re- whence several of the remarks in the
ligiosum est tamen gaudere dedono: text have been derived.]
104 AU spirits not the Holy Spirit.
s E R IM. But this or that, the Holy Ghost is then given them, partly
'- — to direct and strengthen them in their ways, and partly
to assume unto Itself', for the more assurance and authority,
those actions -which belong to their place and calling. And
such is the PoAver of the Keys.
I haste to an end. From the Avords I gather two things ;
that they receiAcd a Spirit ; that they received a Holy Spirit.
[Audrewes For first, men may receive a running humour instead of a true
iiip^i'sa!] ^11^ constant spirit. I speak now of grace making free, which
the Apostles, being fitly disposed, received here, as well as
free grace ; and in them it was right, a true spirit, in others
it may be an humour only. I wish it were not that humours
were not sometimes mistaken for the Spirit, even in clergy-
men themselves ; a fiery humour for the Spii-it of zeal ; a
windy humour for the Spirit of purity; a running, busy,
humour for the Spirit of diligence ; and a thousand disorderly
humours besides for the Spirit of freedom and godly courage,
as they call it.
Again, as by that excellent prelate it has been obsen^ed,
man may receive the Spirit, and yet not the Holy Spirit ; for
as there are many humours, so are there many spirits too : a
private spirit, that does all by immediate revelation ; a Avorldly
spirit, that does all by human policy ; a spirit of giddiness^
that reels to and fro hke a weathercock, blown every year
to a new religion ; a spirit of error that will believe lies, and
a spirit of enw that will endure no peace. There is also a
spnit of slumber that passes away the time without any sense
of God at all. And all these are no Holy Spirits ; they that
follow them, follow their own ghost instead of the Holy
Ghost, Which Avas here received, and no other.
[Aluhewes NoAv I obscrvc, it is last of all observed that Avherever this
iii. p. 205, Spirit is named, there comes in a Sanctus Avith It; It is ahvays
'^^^■i ' called the Holy Spirit''. Why this title ? Avhy not the Spirit
of poAVcr, or the Spirit of government as Avell, specially for
Apostles ami Inshops? Not but that He is the Spmt of them
too, but for that He delights more in this than in any other
Gen. 11. attribute Avhatsoever. Iligli and Mighty, Glorious and
Ex 15 V l^o^^<'''f"l ^"^'f^^ ^'^ His appellations too, but Holy, Holy, Holy,
Ps. 29. 4. is (he anthem, the title, that the Cherubim and Seraphim
"• [See St. Atli.inas. 0pp. i. Goo.]
I
i
The attribute 'Holy' why appUecl to the Spirit. 105
continually tlo ciy, that the quire of heaven nuikc choice of.
Indeed the only title, Avhcn all is done, which leaves us a
lesson (but that this unholy age is loath to be taught it), if God
and His Spirit so esteem of it, tlmt we should do so likewise,
deliiiht to have our actions holv, our Avords holy, our bodies
holy, all oiu" lives holy ; we cannot please God better than
with holiness, and without holiness we cannot please Ilim at Htb.l2.i i.
all. If God be pleased to make such high account of this title,
then we, wherever we find it, to do the like, that holy per-
sons, holy places, holy times, and all things sacred and holy,
may be had in regard of us ; and more especially this holy
place, wherein now w^e are, this holy feast which now we [Advent
celebrate, Ilis holy Word, which now we hear, and His holy ^^"'^^y-J
Sacrament which we are now about to receive. Times and
places are out of my way, but for persons, the person of a
bishop or a priest, tell me, to which of the Angels said He at
any time, ' Receive the Holy Ghost V or, ' Whose sins thou Joii. 20.
dost remit, they are remitted '1' But manum cle tabula ; it is ""' ~^'
a new and a long theme that, another hour^ must end it.
]My Lord, you see you have an honourable and an holy
calling, an embassage that Christ sends you on, even as His
Father sent Him. And now is the commission to be sealed,
first with the Holy Ghost and then with the Holy Sacrament,
which is the reason that you kneel here alone till that be
past. I will not take upon me to be your instructor, but
here is your pattern, peace with men and holiness with God.
Of old it was written upon the bishop's mitre. Now, (as Da\dd [iKings2.
said to Solomon,) I know you are wise, do then according to ' -'
your wisdom ; that when you have performed your embassy
with honour here, you may reap the fruits of it in everlasting
glory hereafter. To which He bring both you and us Who
hath purchased the same for us.
*■ [An allusion to the customary iv. § 21 ; and the conclusion of the
length of a sermon ; see Bingh. XIV. eighth sermon in this volume.]
SERMON VII.
VII.
AT BRANCEPATH, FIFTH SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY, JUNE 27, 1630. "
SlDiutovium nostrum in nomine Domini.
Psalm cxxii. 6, 7^.
(A Psalm occurring in the ordinary service of the day.)
Pray for the peace of Jerusalem, they shall prosper that love
thee.
Peace be ivithih thy ivalls, and plenteousness ivithhi thy
jjalaces.
S E R IM. Which is king Da^dd's devotion and piety, toAvards the
Churcli and commonwealtli of God. A piety that originally,
I confess, and according to the letter, respects the Church of
the Jews, and the house of God among them, hut in a far
better and a higher sense, chiefly, no doubt, and according
to the substance, respects also the Church of Christ, and the
house of God among us.
For howsoever this Psalm was first penned for the ark^ of
the old covenant, when with a religious solemnity it was
brought up to Jerusalem, yet it w as not king David's mean-
ing, nor the meaning of the Holy Ghost neither, but it might
be extended and applied to more covenants than it. His
meaning was not to shut up this peace Avithin the walls of
the city only, nor to engross this plenteousness unto her
palaces aloue, but to have both the one and the other as
" A fragment of a sermon upon gratiarum actionem, quod area tandem
tlie same text may be seen in the stabilem sedem rcperisset, et succcssio
Appendix. in regno ad ccrtam fainiliam alligata
'' Kxitat eos [Judatos] David ad cssct. Pol. Synops. ad loc.
'Jerusalem' implies both Church and state. 107
diffusive through his own kingdom ; so, extensive (and that
cliiefly) to the kingdom of Christ.
And what shoukl hinder the Psalm, but as it went from
the doors of the tabernacle, for which it was first made, to
the gates of the temple, where afterwards it became one of
their gi'adual*^ songs, sung upon the third step of their
ascent unto it, so it might pass also as well quite tlu'ough the
temple itself, and reach unto the Church of Christ, whereof
the JcAvs' Church was but a shadow. Surely the Psalm was
for both ; both for Jew and Christian ; and so the text for
both, both for their Church and ours ; and but for them
originally only, to last but for a while neither ; but for us
intentionally and truly, to last for all ages after that, from
the first coming of Christ in grace, to Ilis second coming
again in judgment. It might be our care also to pray for
the peace and plenty of Christ's Chm*ch among us, as it was
their care of old to pray for the peace and plenteousness of
Jerusalem among them ; and that they, above all others,
might prosper, that love, and seek to prosper it.
I name the peace and plenty of the Church only, I should
name the peace and plenty of the state also ; that we are to
seek, and to love, and to pray for the quiet prosperity of them
both, both of the Church and kingdom Avherein we live ; for
Jerusalem here comprehends them both, and was the seat of
them both, of the house of the Lord, at the first verse, and of
the house of David at the fifth.
So have we the sum of all, that for God's house and the
king's, that is, for the Church and state, wherein we live, our
chief endeavours be, even with prayers and love and all that
is ours, to procure peace and plenty, and prosperity to them
both, 'O pray for the peace of Jerusalem, let them prosper
that love it.'
The text delivers itself in the terms of one that is advising
and wishing for us somewhat that is most behoveful for us, if
his advice might be taken ; but inasmuch as we see wishing
and advice to prevail so seldom, and all manner of counsel,
in matters of religion especially, to be so little set by, we
must find more in it than so ; not wishing only, and matter of
^' The meaning of this expression is Lorinus Comment, in Ps. cxix. (cxx.)
discussed at considerable length by iii. 5i8. edit. 1019.
108 Division of the text.
S E R M. advice alone, but command also, and matter of precept
. ^'^' -svitlial. And that wc find in the dignity of llis person, that
was author to us of this advice. It is votum Davidis, it is
votum Spiritus Sancti ; it is the advice of king David, and
there is much in that, but it is the wish of the Holy Ghost too,
and therein is more ; ever in His optative, there is an impera-
• tive ; in His wish, there never fails to be a command, never, if
he has any wit that hears it. So that these words, rightly
understood, ' O pray for,' or, ' "Would to God ye would pray
for' ' the peace of Jerusalem,^ are both an advice, and an in-
junction withal, of the nature of an edict ; we fall into the
peril of contempt, and disobedience, and irreligion, if we do it
not, if we do not what we are here advised unto.
And that is not one single duty neither ; they are many,
and they shall be so many parts of my text.
(1.) That first, our care must be for Jerusalem, the seat of
God's house and the king's.
(2.) That this care must be shewn by our prayers for it.
(3.) That these prayers must beg the blessing of peace
upon it.
(4.) And not peace alone, but peace and plenty too, peace
and prospei'ity withal.
(5.) That there may be walls about it for this peace, and
palaces within it for this prosperity.
(6.) But lastly, that this peace and this prosperity may be
the reward only of them that love it : and for them that love
it not, but malign, and spite, and hurt it all they can, that
they may go seek some other, for here we find no reward for
them.
And these will fall out to be the heads of our present dis-
course, of Avhich that we may speak to the honour of Almighty
God, the peace of our souls, and the prosperity of His Church,
I shall, &c.
THE BIDDING OF THE COMMON I'RAYERS.
Pater Noster Qui es in ca'Iis.
(1.) "We begin with Jerusalem, the subject upon which we
arc to work, and the body for which the prophet would have
us thus careful. That bodv consisteth of two i)arts, and
Good churchmen are good subjects. 1 09
tliese two parts, be the Cliurcli of God, and tlie state of the
kingdom, expressed here in this Psalm by the liouse of the
Lord, in tlie first verse, and the house of king David in \\\o.
fifth. So that Jerusalem stands not here for the city and
the state alone, nor for the temple and the Church alone,
but for both together ; and oui' care, our love, to be shewed
unto them both ; that when any man is busy for the state
and the commonwealth of the kingdom, we set not the
Church aside, and forget not the commonwealth of it ; and
when zealous for the Church, the state and the peace of it,
that we forget not the state and the peace of the kingdom
neither, but, as we are members of both, so to be careful for
the good and prosperity of both. Either of them will not
serve the turn, for both together Avill make up but one Jeru-
salem, both God's house, and the king's, David's.
And a happy conjunction it is, when God's house and the
king's are met together in Jerusalem, in Jerusalem or in any
city, in any state besides ; that where the kingdom is ready
to serve God, and to love the prosperity of Ilis Chm-ch, God
also may be read}^ to preserve them and to love the prosperity
of the commonwealth, et propter donnon Domini, so the Psalm
here endeth, even for the Church's sake, may seek to do them
good. This where they meet; but where they meet not,
where either serves the turn, and under a pretended care of
the one, the other comes clean to be despised and set at
nought, I know not what else to say of it, but unhappy is
that Jerusalem, unhappy are the people that be in such a
case.
Yet in all ages there have been some, and are too many in
this, who are well content to be for the prosperity of the state,
for they know well their livelihoods and means must depend
upon it ; but, then let the Church sink or swim, since they
can live without it, they care little for it ; prosper themselves
and their own houses, they can never have enough of it, but
(hear ye !) prosper no church, no house of religion ; they
have too much of it already. This is one kind, all for the
temporal state, for Jerusalem the kingdom. \Ye will deal
justly with you. They have their opposites, another kind,
peradventure as ill as themselves, that are all for the spiritual
state, for Jerusalem the Church, that cry up domns Domini
110 Duties not to be sejmrated.
s E R ^i. so fast^ as if domus Davidis were not worth the looking after;
— — ^ — that so their state be well^ no matter how the kingdom fares,
but kingdom, power, and glory, and all, must be all swallowed
up by them ; that think there can be no love shewn to set up
the house of God, unless there be some stratagem invented
to puU down the house of David ; so hard a matter is it to
Ps. 122. 3. keep Jerusalem as a city that is at unity within itself, or for
factious minded men to hold a mean. But I shall tell you
the truth ; in the one of these there is but a false religion,
that are all for Jerusalem the Church ; in the other there is
no religion at all, that are all for Jerusalem the state.
Yet such there are, and an evil use it is that has possessed
the world. Commonly we cannot affect one part, but we
must despise the other; we cannot raise the price of one
virtue, but we must cry down all the rest. Ye may see it in
many other cases besides this ; when some men would exalt
the pulpit, they cannot do it without debasing the desk ;
when they would canonize their preachers, they cannot do it
without disgracing their readers ; unless prayers and common
service may be clean brought out of credit when inward worship
is cried up, all outward reverence must be laid down ; we
cannot give God om* souls but we must keep oiu' bodies to
oui'selves ; and if He has the heart, some of us will have the
hat, say what ye will. So we cannot possibly bring in alms
and works of mercy but offerings and works of devotion must
be quite thrown away for relics ; and but by the sale of
Christ^s ointment we know no way to provide either for oui'-
selves or others.
Sensible enough are we in other matters, in this we are all
too dull ; of two duties that are set forth, we commonly re-
gard but one, and that one we make a means also to depress
and hold down the other, as if both could not stand together.
It is the case in hand, as if the care of Jerusalem the city,
and the good of the commonwealth were a supersedeas'^ to
any man from the care of Jerusalem the temple, and the good
of God's Church. But king Da\id's care here was for both.
And Christ's precept is for both, and there is a due regard to
'' Supersedeas, a WTit commanding which ought otherwise to proceed,
the suspension of some ordinary pro- Jacob's Law Diet,
eeedings at law, on good cause sliewn.
Action to be joined urith prayer. Ill
be had of both, that what God hath joined together, we pre-
sume not to part asunder ; and what care the prophet
here would have extended to both, we engi'oss not to one
alone, for both we may do, and both we must. To be careful
for God's house and the Church, is to be a good Christian ;
to be careful for the king's house and the state, is to be a
good subject ; and both these are in God's eyes most accept-
able. Nay it will ever be found true likewise, the better
Christian the better subject, the more we love God's house,
the more will we love the king's also. Enough for Jeru-
salem.
(2.) The next is Kogate, that how well we love this body, we
would shew it first by praying for it. In which word I in-
clude, and the original will do as much, a care to endeavoiu* See PoH.
and seek out what good for it we may, to studj^ and procm'c '^"°l'^-
what peace for it we can, as well as sit still and wish it well
with good prayers for the kingdom first, to come hither and
cry Da pacem in diebus nostris, Domine, ' Give it peace in our
time, O Lord,' and then to run out into the streets, and when
Ave hear of any stirs abroad, to throw up oiu' caps at it, and
think the world will be all ours. This may well be Rogare
pacem ; but we never meant it, I am sure it is not quosrite et
persequemini pacem, as the Holy Ghost meant it. Nothing
so. Then for the Church ; to wish it well, ay, ay, ' For the
whole estate of Christ's Church militant here on earth, and
especially for the Church wherein we live,' we can all say the
prayer by heart to wish it well, I say to pray for the peace,
unity, and concord, and prosperity of it, and Avlien we have
done that, to go hence and do it all the evil we may, and to
seek both the disquiet and the poverty, both the defrauding
and the ruin of it, this is so far from Rogate pacem, that it
cries defiance both to the Church and to the text itself.
To pray for it then, it is not only to speak for it, to speak
a good word for it, and to do it a worse mischief, but to speak
for it, and to do for it as well ; to speak, and seek, and sue,
and labom' to procm'e it all the good we are able. But when
all is done by men, a hearty prayer to God is like to procure
it most good, that what they are not willing to do. He may
be pleased to do Himself, by inclining their hearts and
making them wiUing to do it also. And therefore, when all
112 Necessity of prayer for the Church.
s E R M. the good is clone to it that ma}- he done, l)csides that, the
VTT
'— prophet yet calls ont for prayer, as the most requisite for
Church and state of all other duties that we may do for them,
and the most availahle means to prociare that good unto them
from men, Avhich otherwise thev are not so likelv to do of
themselves.
Which St. Paul knew well, when above all other things
conducing to a quiet and peaceable life, his exhortation was
1 Tim. 2.1. to make prayers, and supplications, and intercessions for all
men, but specially for kings, and them that bear rule over us
in the state.
Nor does the Church less want om' prayers than the king-
dom does, against which the enmity of the world is more
fierce, the devices of men more subtle, and the gates of heU
set wider open than against any other state of the world
Mat.iG.i8. besides. For while Christ tells St. Peter that the gates of hell
shall not prevail against the Church, He tells us withal that
these gates of hell, they gape not wider for any thing than they
do for it, even for the mischief and the ruin of the Church, with
that which will siu'ely folloAV it, even the desolation of all re-
ligion and piety. We see then the necessity of prayer for
Jerusalem ; and from it we pass to the third thing, which is
the necessity of her peace ; for there be two blessings here,
which our prayers are to beg at God's hands, and which our
endeavours are to procure at all hands, both to the Church
and state wherein we live, which is peace and plenty. And
peace is the first.
(3.) Of which we cannot say less, than that it is one of the
greatest blessings that either a state or a Chm'ch can enjoy ;
for let them have other blessings never so many, plenty and
prosperity never so miich, yet if they have them and have no
peace with them, they are but nominal, they are no real
blessings. The blessing of peace is that only Avliich blesseth
and crowneth all other blessings whatsoever.
It is not so easily conceived, this, by them that live in
peace already, but of them that want it, it is known full well ;
and what would not they give to have it, that at any time
have it not ?
I would therefore, while we are telling of this blessing of
peace, that you Avould look not upon yourselves in a quiet
AutJionty for the prayer for jteace. 113
state at home, but upon otlicrs in a troul)lcd state abroad ;
upon a kinjrdora in war and blood, upon a Churcli in scbism
and persecution ; that you would ask tlieni wliicli arc liewn
asunder by the sword, and roasted to ashes M'ith the flame,
tliat you would conceive but their case once to be your own ;
and then tell me wliether it be not good advice or no, by all
means qucerere et rogare paceni Jerusalem, to seek for and to
sue, to pray for and to preserve, the peace of the state and
Church wherein we live.
I begin with the state first, the ci^il peace ; for when we
do but hear the word spoken, even that peace comes first
into our minds, even Augustus' peace, and the shutting up
of Janus, and the ceasing all noise of war.
Wliercin I shall never fear to make cWA peace a part, as
of David's here, so of Christ's wish in the Gospel, nor of His
beati paclfici neither ; to say that happy they be that have it, Mat. 5. 9.
and blessed for ever that are the procurers of it.
I have told vou before, that Christ would be born in this
time of civil peace over the world ; you may know by that
wdiat account He made of it : and by His account what we
are to do likewise.
Therefore Orbem pacahmi, as Tertullian*^ tells us, that the
world might be at peace, was ever a clause in the prayers of
the primitive Chiu'ch, and is still kept in ours.
But there are some that delight themselves in broils and
contentions, and say it is but the coward's prayer this, to pray
all for peace ; and that it never was, nor never will be, good
Avorld again, till this desire of peace be laid down, and Avar
set up, Avith all her colours and ensigns about her. Others
that are bold to tell us so, the prophet David giA^es you but Vs. 1 22. 6.
bad counsel and Christ Himself no better ; the Apostles Avere Mat. 5. 9.
out, the old Christians Avrong, and the Church of England as jg j^gi,'
ill as they, when in her public Litanies she appoints us to ^2. H, &c.
pray, ' that Ave may all be delivered from battle and murder,'
and that we may be hurt by no persecution.
But we are men that from Clnist's mouth preach Beati
^ The passage to which allusion is lem,popiilnm probum, orhem quietum,
made appears to be this. Oranius pro et qu^cuiujuc hominis et C.esaris vota
omnibus imperatoribus, vitam illis pro- sunt. Apologet. cap. xxx. p. 27. edit.
lixam, imperium securum, domuni 1G(J4.
tutam, exercitus fortes, senatum fide-
COSIN. I
114< No cowardice to pray for peace.
s E R M. pacifici, and from David's moiitli Royate pacem Jerusalem,
which we arc to make good against both these opposers, both
the one and the other. Those that think it a cowardly, first,
then those that think it an unlawful prayer.
And for the former; we knoAV not what some men call
1 Sam. IG. courage and valour, but sure we are king DaA-id was one that
i^i o wanted neither, famous in Israel for his valour, and renowned
2 Sam. 8. ' ... .
13; 17. 8. through the world for his \ictories, that made single combat
28. 3™" Avith the giant, and dyed the Philistines in their OAvn blood,
that made war with a witness, and proved most victorious in
it ; yet he it is here, as great a SAvord-man, as stout a Avarrior
as he was, that comes in upon Royate pacem, and not only
bids us pray, but prays also for peace himself. It is the
conqueror's prayer. Again, Avith the poor, Aveak shepherds,
that perhaps had no valour in them, there Avas a company of
Lu. 2. 13. heavenly soldiers, saith St. Luke, and sure we are that they
had valour and courage in them enough ; yet their prayer
was for peace too, Gloria in excelsis Deo, et pax in terris. It
is votum militare, it comes from the mouths of soldiers them-
selves ; they praise it, and pray for it, they sing of it, and
wish it, where they Avish any good ; neither knoAv they Avhat
better thing they should wish to men, than peace upon earth.
So it is the soldier's prayer also, not the gown-man's alone,
nor the Aveak man's prayer only, but the wise and the valiant
and the stout man's too. And being so, Ave may be certain
it is neither coAvardice to pray for peace, nor courage to call
for broils and troubles.
For what greater happiness can there be, than that it
should be with us here on earth, as it is with the Angels in
heaven? and AA'ith them it is all peace, as Nazianzen*^ Avell
obserA'es from their prayer in the Gospel, puynas et dissidia
nescire Deum et Anyelos, no broils, no brabbles in heaven,
but aU at quiet there, and all wishing for peace here. So
that a kind of heaven there is upon earth, when there is peace
upon earth ; and justly are they blessed and rightly are they
called the children of God that are, or shall be at any time,
the procurers of it.
Not that it is unlawful to enter upon a war neither, (as
' . . . TovTdiv 5' ov'tiv oi/Tois XZiov, ois Naz. Orat, xii. 0pp. i. 198. edit. 1630.
rb ^.^lax^v re Ktxi acTTaffiaffTou. S. Greg.
Peace a blessing of God. 115
the Anabaptists hath sometimes fondly taught,) when nor
peace nor right can otlicrwisc be performed; but that in the
midst of such troubles, our desires and ends be still for peace;
that howsoever the sword may be put into the hand, yet that
Royate pacern^ the prayer for peace, be never put out of the
heart.
And absque hoc I cannot tell what account men make of
contentious and garboils and mischief done to the other.
For if peace be God's blessing, as a chief of His blessings it
is, we may reckon by that what contention, Avhat no peace is :
no less than the curse of God, than the rod of His wrath, as
Isaiah termcth it, Avhereby men are scourged for their pride is. lo. -5.
and for their weariness of a peaceable and godly life. No, it
is but a sport, says Abner, for men to go together by the 2 Sam. 2.
ears ; but he found it, as ye all find, it, even in any breach of
the peace whatsoever, a little sport in the beginning, but
bitterness in the ending, not to fail. Whereupon we bring
in king David's ad\dce, both for the state in general, and for
every one of you in particular ; ' Pray for the peace ;' seek
her out w^herever she is to be found ; and if she hides herself,
enquire after her ; if she flies from you, give her not over yet,
but follow her to the end, and Avhen you have gotten her, you
have got a blessing, the greatest blessing that this world can
afford.
In regard whereof, those other men have but little to do, it
seems, who are finding fault with the public prayers of the
Church, Avhen, according to the prophet's rule here, we pray
for the continuance of our peace, and desire to be kept from
battle and persecution. Nay, when we do as king David
adviseth, and as St. Paul enjoineth, and must be blamed for
that, I know not what to say to them. This I will say, w^e
need not Avonder at their other cavils, when these be so un-
christian. ' Pray for the peace of Jerusalem,' saith the
prophet here : pray that you may live a peaceable and a godly
hfe under your king, saith St. Paul. No ; pray for no peace, 1 Tim. 2.2.
pray not against any^ battle, saith our Puritan, du'ectly
against the text ; and for so saying let us ever think wliat
spirit governs the sect, we shall be sure to find that it is none
B See L. Osiandri Epit. Hist. Ec- Hist. Luth. i. 177.
cles. iv. 935. Tubing. 1608; Seckend. '' See Hooker's E. P., v. 48.
1 .2
116 Christians ought to pray for peace.
S E R M. of the Spirit of peace. They are all for contentions and
'- — brabbles, both at home and abroad, and He every where
against them, as we also ought to be ; and let this be enough
for the first point.
I should noAv come from the ciA'il peace, the peace of the
state, to the religious peace, the peace of the Church ; and
the peace that we are to preserve, one Christian with another;
but of that, there is somewhat more to be said than the time
will now allow, which will force us to reserve it till, by God's
grace, we have another.
Only for a conclusion at this time, let us ever and always
remember that without peace abroad we shall never be in
peace at home; and if the state has no quiet, we cannot
choose but want that blessing ourselves. That therefore,
being subjects under a blessed and a gracious and a peaceable
king, Ave pray for the continuance of his peace, and for the pros-
perity of this Jerusalem, all oiu' Hfe long ; that Ave join Avith
Job. 14. Christ in His wish, »«a7 in teri'is, and Avith David in \x\%, juix
^" ,„, ^ in Jerusalem, and Avith St. Paul in his, 'peace Avitli all men
Ps. 122. 0. '_ ^ _ _
Rom. 12. ^s f^i' ^s lies in us,^ — that God Avould put it into our hearts,
^^- and into the hearts of all that profess His Name, so to affect
His peace, that the prophet here may have his AA'ish, that as
the old Christians said, Orbis pacatus\ there may be peace
through the Christian Avorld. Indeed such desires may speed
or miss thereafter, as they meet with the sons of peace ; but
howsoever such good desires, such holy prayers, shall always
return into oiu' own bosoms, and the God of peace Avill never
fail to reward them Avith peace and joy hereafter, that love
righteousness and peace here. To which peace and joy He
bring us. That hath prepared the same for us, even Chi'ist our
Lord and SaAiour.
' Tertull. Apologet. cap. xxx. p. 27. edit. ICCi.
SERMON VIII.
IN FESTO PENTECOSTES, DURHAM, [mAY 20,] 1632.
SlDjutoiium nostrum in ilominc Bomlnl.
Romans viii. 14.
Quiamqne Sjnritu Dei agimtur, ii sunt filli Dei.
For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, those are the sons
of God.
[For as many as are led hy the Spirit of God, they are the sons of
God.']
This feast keep we holy to the sending of the Holy Ghost.
And ever upon this feast somewhat we are to speak^ and
some text to choose that belongs to His sending; so does
this. The Gospel" ye heard refers to the promise of it, 'I
will send Him ;' the Epistle'' to the performance of it. And
He was sent upon the persons of the Apostles to remain with
the Church for ever. This text, to the end of promise and
performance both, that now God has sent Him, and come He
is. He may have that honour done Him for which His coming
and His sending was, That was to be our leader and our
guide, that we may be led by the Spirit of God in this verse,
that we might Avalk not after the conduct of the flesh but
after the leading of the Spirit, in all the verses before. For Rom. 8. i,
first and last through this whole chapter, the Apostle still ^2, I3,&c.
sends us to the Spirit, to see whether we follow Him, or no ;
whether our walk lies after His guiding, or the guiding of
some other ; if after His, then to assure ourselves that we
are right and that we keep this feast to some pui'pose, being
'^ John 14. 1-3. The Gospel for tlie * Acts?. 1. Tlie portion of vSen'pturo
clay. appointed for the Epistle for the day.
118 Importance of the feast of Pentecost.
s E R M, tlicrcby brouglit unto a state of happiness^ even the blessed
'— state of the sons of God. But if not, if Ave choose to Hke
better of some other guide to be led by than of Him (suppose
it be of the world, or the flesh, or our own self-will, or any
such leaders as they be,) then to make account we are
wrong, and that Ave keep this feast of the Holy Ghost to no
purpose at all, being by that means brought to a state of
misery and death, even the miserable estate of the sons of
Avrath. So it runs here, ' If ye Hac after the flesh, ye shall
surely die ; but if by the Spirit ye mortify the flesh, ye shall
Rom. 8. 13. surely live. For as many as are led by the Spirit of God,
those are the sons of God.^ Then as many as are not led by
Him, AA'hose sons are they? Sons of God they are none, and
part of Christ^s inheritance are they none, they are none of
'belong jjis surc ; they long' to some other.
By this now we come to know what the use of the Holy
Ghost is, and what the use of His feast ; that without Him,
all ovoc other feasts of the year are nothing, even all the rest,
from the very first, the Incarnation, to the very last, the
Ascension of Christ, though all honourable in themselves, yet
never a one of them beneficial to us Avithout this day, and
this duty of the day, which we are to keep holy to the Holy
Ghost. For in all these of Christ He made but the purchase
only. He did but pay for this inheritance and state of sons
2 delivered which we look for, He gave us no possession, nor livered- us
any seizin of it Himself, but reserved that for His Spirit,
2 Cor. 1. Who is the earnest, the investiture of our redemption, saith
iifi.h 'i 14 ^** ^^^^y that as many as were led by Him might be brought
into fiiU fruition of it, invested to the state, and be made
heirs with Christ, CA'en the sons of the liAing God.
So that upon the well or ill keeping, the good or bad use
of this feast, depends our interest or our forfeit of all that
3 should went before. For that cause it would'* be the better heeded;
and if we be Avilling to learn, this text will teach us.
In it I shall consider tAVO general heads, (I.) the duty of
the day, out of each uguntur, that is, the duty we owe to the
Holy Ghost, to be led by Him ; (II.) and then the fruit of it,
out of Filii Dei, that doing our duty and being so led, avc come
to have assurance made us that we are the sons of God ; these
tAvo. And in the first I set fojth these parts.
Division of the subject. 119
(1.) That wc arc in a \A'ay ; Christianity is a Avay.
(2.) Tliat in this yvixy avc arc to Avalk; in Christianity there
must be a going forward, it is no idle, but a stirriug and an
active life.
(3.) That in our going Ave folloAv a guide ; not to go at a
venture, or to gad ourselves alone.
(4.) That this guide, the right guide, be the Spirit, and no
other guide.
(5.) That this Spirit be the right Spirit, and no other than
the Spirit of God, to Whom this day and this duty both be
dedicate.
Then in the second, (but I think we shall not reach to it
to-day,) I shall set forth,
(1.) That they Avho obserA'e the duty shall be sure of the
blessing, shall be the sons of God.
(2.) That they all.
And (3.) That they only ; for the Apostle says not barely,
such as are led shall be sons, (so might others be, as well as
they,) but octol a>yovTaL, ovrot elatv, as many as are led so,
they are, — Avith a double emphasis, to them only, as many, and
no more ; they, and none but they. These are the parts ; of
Avhich, &c.
THE BIDDING OF THE COMMON PRAYERS.
Pater Noster.
(1.) 'As many as are led.' I said that leading did suj)pose
a guide, and a guide supposeth a going, and going must
needs suppose a way to go in. So here Ave begin ; AA'here I
am to tell you these terms of ' way,' and ' walking,' and
' going on,' and ' leading,' meet us so thick all along the
Scripture, and are so frequent as well in holy as in human
writers, that plain it is our life is held a journey, not so much
of via pedum, the way that we pace Avith our feet, as of via
mormn, the way that we trace Avitli our actions. Our doings
are said to be our goings, go they Avliich way they will; in
AA'hich sense the schoolmen are Avont to call us all Viatores",
travelling and wayfaring men, every one of us, even from our
■^ Hug. de S. Victore, Opp. i. il. where in the writings of the Fathers
edit. I(il7 ; and very frequently else- and Schoolmen.
120 TTie necessity of going in the right path,
s E R M. first coining into the world to our last going out of the world
again, still going in a way either right or wi'ong, out or in, one
of the two. It behoves us that our way be right, and that we
know whcreunto it will bring us, for those two arc all, and yet
no more than we look to in every journey than to be looked to
in this of ours, our spiritual wayfare and travel in this vale of
vanity. The end whither we go, and the way by which we
go ; for otherwise we wander up and down, we know not
Avhei'e, nor we know not whither, not viatores then, but
vagabundi. But viatores we are. And the end whither we
are to go, and come at last, lies open to the view, is plain
here before our eyes at the end of the verse ; we are to come
to the inheritance of the sons of God, to be made heu's Avith
Christ. And happy we, if in our travels we may once arrive
there ; I make no doubt but that is agreed on at all hands,
if that way thither were agreed on as well. But the way is
various ; many a way open and fair to see to, yet but one
way to be taken of them all. There I suppose we must agree
again upon the necessity of a guide ; one that shall lead us
in the right way, for fear of erring, and travelling, and
coming at last, not to this, but to another, a fearful end.
(2.) But before Ave come to om* leader, this (I trow) will
be agreed on again, that if this life of oiu-s be a Avay, if we
be set upon a journey, we are to travel and go on in it; it is
a traveller's and no idle man's life. And so let every man
make account that the estate of a Christian after his baptism
is the estate of him that hath undertaken a voyage, which by
standing still and doing nothing, or by going some two steps
at first and then sit down and give over, Avill never be per-
formed ; it must be by continual steps, and pressing forwards.
Phi]. 3. 14. as St. Paul sj)eaks, to the mark and end we aim at.
To them, therefore, that have taken up their rest, say they
have gone far enough already and are weary, make no pro-
gress in Christianity — to them that are no further on their
way of religion now than they were seven years since, we
say, as Christ said to them in the market. Why stand ye
Mat. 20. 6. still? Svhy stand ye here all the day idle?' The day comes
and the year returns, and ye are not a step further ; other-
whiles ye are further back, too, than ye Avere before. This
is no traveller's life, and therefore no life of a Christian, it
and of having a guide ifi that path. 121
has too much ease in it ; as [if] he said, Lay all upon Clirist's
slioulders, and let us sit down and take no thought, lie will
travel for us all and make us all sons of God (that is, bring
us to our journey's end) whether we set foot forwards in the
way or no. I thought where it was ; this is the conceit of
many in the world, and this is to live after the flesh, the very
thing that St. Paul here complains on as being most opposite
to the Spirit, and most destructive of this day's duty to Him.
I Avill give you better counsel ; they are lumps of flesh that lie
still and idle, or somewhat that is worse, stu" not a whit them-
selves, but lav all the burden and travail upon another. Come Mat. ii.
seek Me, all ye that travail, and I will refresh you, says Christ; "
He does not sav, all ye, or any of ye, that travail not, that sit
still and do nothing. Therefore the counsel is, and so is the
lesson, that in our way of religion we be stiJl moving on,
every day getting some ground or other in it ; and that not
slowly neither, but as they that make an expedition, or as
they that are set to run in a race, (so the Apostle styles it;) iieb. 12. i.
where every one strives to get the mastery, we should go the icor.9.25.
swiftest pace, that is, Ave should make the best progress in
Christianity.
(3.) And noAV to our leader; for the way we speak of, the
right way, is somewhat hard to find ; et dux nobis opus est, I
trow ; we need a guide to lead us in it ; the best of us all.
Indeed if the way was so broad and easy as that every
body might hit on it, blind men and all, take what course they
Avould, we should never need to trouble ourselves with a
leader, we might go where we Avould and give St. Paul a
supersedeas^ here for his ajovrat. But the way is not so
broad, says Christ, and it is but a blind man's fancy other- Mat. 7. 14.
wise to judge of it. The way is strait and narrow of itself,
hard to find; and besides, there be a many by-paths and cross
turnings by the way-side, that without doubt we shall surely
miss unless we seek a leader to guide us.
From hence then to take notice of our own frail infirmities,
of the wandering and payless estate we are in till God vouch-
safes to send us a leader, how ready we are to stray and
wander and go, we know not whither, unless we have one to
go with us, and one that, like the word in Isaiah, shall still
"^ See note to Sermon yil. p. 110.
122 We should he careful to have the right (juide,
S E R M. call out to us as we go, aud sa}^, Hcec est via, ' Hear \c, this
^^^^^' is the way/ and that is none of it ; keep ye here and turn
Is. 30. 21. j^Q^ from it : for if ever we be in the right way to our
heavenly inheritance we are beholden to our guide for it, it
is He only That keeps us in and tells us when we are amiss ;
Ezek. 34. otherwise, sicut oves erraticcB, as Ezekiel compares us, we are
straggling upon every mountain ; sicut popidi in deserto, we
have neither path nor pillar to go by ; sicut servi in ^gypto,
Ex. 5. 12. we are scattered over all the land of Egypt, to seek stubble
aud straw, the express pattern of the world, wandering in
vanity and picking up straws, and seeking things that shall
not profit us ; nay seeking them for him too that seeks the
ruin of us all, the de\dl, of aU us, as Pharaoh did of the
Israelites, till they were so happy as to get Moses to be their
guide, and we the Spirit, to lead us from this scattering and
running after their ruin, brought them into the right way and
led them through the wilderness. So the Spirit should lead
us through the world to the land of promise, to the land of
our inheritance.
That by this time we see the necessity of a leader. And
if we see it, what see we in them, trow ye, that think they
want no leader ? that take it in foul scorn thev should not be
thought able to lead themselves? that can go well enough
without a teacher, they. They need none of your help ; nay,
and can take upon them to lead others too ; all must go their
way, and they will bring them, but God knows whither.
Surely if this world goes on, we shall have them to undertake
more, to control their own leaders, to be guides and leaders
to them too ; and then is this verse inverted, this text turned
quite backwards to what it is now ; not so many led by the
Spirit, but the Spirit led by so many; not so many as are
the sons of God led by the Spirit of God, but the Spirit of
God, and any one's spirit besides, led by so many; as though
they be not, yet think themselves to be the dearest sons and
daughters that God has, and the only wise men and women
of the world.
Well, be their wisdom as it will, but sure we are, as a wise
and reverend prelate hath told us, a Avise man he was and a
Acts 8. 28, godly that told St. Philip in the Acts, he was not fible to lead
himself, nor knew not the wav to be made one of the sons of
namely, God's Hohj Spirit. 123
God without a guide, niid therefore a guide lie got him, took
him to his chariot. And whatever others do, the best and
surest way will be to follow the tract that the wheels of his
chariot have made, to get us a leader and to account oiu*
state the state of them that must be led, and are not able to
go the way themselves.
(4.) To be led, then. Yet not by every leader, but by one
that knoAvs, one that is skilful in the way. This is the foui'th
point. And no point need we to be so much advised of, as
of this ; that if we assent to have a leader, we take a right
one, one that has his eyes in his head, and tlie waj^ perfect ;
for »i ccecus cwcum (as Christ said), being blind oiu-selves, if Mat. 1,5,
we be led by them that are blind too, which, God Avot, is the ^ ^'
common leading we have among us now, the fruit is infoveam,
at last they both fall into a ditch, and there they perish.
One that is a skilful leader then. And (as He said of
Christ, so say I here of the Spirit of Christ) who is he ? or
Avhere shall we have any so skilful to lead us as He is ? The
Spirit Whom Christ erewhiles at His going up to heaven, said
He would send and set this day to lead us into all truth ; the Acts 1. 8.
Spirit That helpeth ns and knoweth our infirmities; that if Joh.ie.i.j.
we be at a stand is able to advise us, if we be out is able to ^"'"•'^■2'^*
bring us in again. Xo better leader than He.
And I make no doubt but all that travel by this way and
are willing to have a guide, will so resolve that the Spirit is
the best leader. Of the leader then we are agreed, so are we
not of the Spirit yet.
For we have pretenders, good store, to the Spirit; and
many spirits there are, saith St. John, Avliich be gone abroad Uoli. 4. 1.
in the world, yet never a true spirit, ne^er a Spirit of God
among them all, but one.
To try the spirits therefore, whether they be of God or no, 1 joh. 4. 1.
as St. John says there, whether the Spirit that leads ns be
the Spirit of Christ or no, as the Apostle says here, will be
all the laboiu" ; and now we shall have somewhat to do.
(5.) "Whether the Spirit, first, the fifth point ; next,
whether the Holy Spirit, the Spirit to Whom we keep this day
holy, that is, the Spirit of God ? The Spirit ; for men may be
led, and not with the Spirit, though in the mean while they
think they are. The Spirit of God, for there may be a mis-
121 TJie Holy Ghost different from human imjmlse,
s E R M. take aj^ain, there may be a spirit to lead us which is none of
L_ God's, and unless it be both Spiritus, and Spiritus Christi,
this text is not satisfied.
As many as are led by the Spirit, first. And here we may
be full oft pjistaken, there is some near affinity between a
humour and a spirit. That humour has deceived a many,
and made them think they w^ere led by the Spirit, when it
was but their own fleshly w-ill and fancy only that hurried
them away. So have we seen fierce men and hot in their
humour, taken themselves to be led all the while by the
spirit of zeal ; subtle men and cimning in theirs, to be led
by the spirit of knowledge ; wary ones and Avise in their own
conceit, by the spirit of counsel ; stubborn men and wilful in
their humour, to be led by the spirit of fortitude; froward
men and disorderly in their humour, disorderly both in
Church [and state,] to be led by the spirit of freedom; and a
whole saint-seeming tribe together in their fancy to be led by
the spirit of godliness. The world would think now here
w^ere the gifts of the Holy Ghost to guide them ; and yet are
they but humours all when all is done, and humours of their
own brain too, that flow thither either from their gall, or
from their spleen, or from somewhat that is worse, take they
which they will, and become spirits perhaps to mislead them
away, but spirits to lead them aright are they none. They
talk of puppets in religion and I know not what, and truly it
may be not without cause neither, where men are so foolish
to use them, 1)ut then sure I am these are no better, no
better than the spectra I'eligionis^, very shows and puppets of
religion indeed; if they abide not the one, let them not abide
the other neither, but let the one be abhorred as much as J
the other, and in the name of God let us not be led aside jj
with either. These humours, like them in the body, they "
may well quiver in the veins and disturb the course of nature;
but there is no life, no spirit of religion in them.
It will much concern us, then, to be sure of the spirit ; and
yet we have not done, for it will concern us more to be sure
that when we are led by the spirit, that spirit be the Spirit of
God ; the sixth point.
(6.) And the reason is, because the world has set up many
* See Andrewes' Sermons, vol. iii. p. 274.
and yet the one is often mistaken for the other. 125
a spirit besides ; and every one will Lave Lis own spirit to be
Him; as Clu'ist foretold us, ye sLall Lave nioreCLrists set up
to guide you; and as His Apostle told tlie Corintliians, ye 2Cor.li.4.
sLall Lave tlicm come and bring tliem witli alium spiritum
and aliud evangelium, anotLer spirit to lead you and a new
Gospel to direct you tLe way wLich He never tauglit tliem.
AnotLer? yea, and many anotLer, saitli St. JoLn; many, iJoh. 1. 1.
saitL St. JoLn^s ]Master, will come in His name and tell you, Mat. 21. 5.
Lo liere lie is, and as soon as ye Lave done witli Lim, Ijo licrc
lie is again, tliat A^ ill lead you riglit. In sucL a place, at sucL
a meeting, ye sLall not miss of Him ; ye sliall Lave leaders,
ye sLall Lave spirits tLere euougL, but scarce a good one
among tLem all.
For tLere is but one true one to lead us ariglit, wlien all is
done; but one Lord and one Spirit to guide us, saitL St. Paul, Eiih. 4. k
and tLat one would be only followed, if we niiglit discern
Lim, wliicL Le is. Now, I say, it is tlie Larder to do tliis,
because as tliere is a good Spirit of God, Qui ducit, so tLere is
a wicked spirit of tlie devil, qui seducit ; take we Leed of Lim.
I will mention Lim no more. As tLere is a Spii-it of trntL,
Lolding out tLe word of God to lead us in tlie way of trutli,
so tliere is a spirit of error, and a spirit of lies, Lolding out iTim. ^.i.
some trifling vanity or otlier to mislead us as fast quite 3.^!"^*'
anotLer way, and as fast as Le leads, tLe world is ready too to
foUow Lim. From wlience it is tLat some men are led by tLe
spirit of slumber, and pass away tlieir time as tLey do tlieir
sleep in tLe uigLt, witLout any otlier tLouglit taking but tLat
tLey are sure enougL of tlie spirit, do tliey wliat tliey will,
as tLe Yalentinians^ of old in Epiplianius, tLat lield tL em-
selves no more polluted witL filtliiness tLan a wedge of gold
witL a dungLill, tliey were pure metal still, pure spirituals.
OtLcrs by tLe spirit of giddiness, (as wlien time was tLe pro-
pLet IsaiaL noted tliem, we may note tLem as well,) wLo run
up and down, Lere and tLere, tLey care not after wLat spirit,
and cLange tLeii* leader as tLey cLange tLeir landlord, are
' . . . T^ TTV^vfiOTiKbv BdXovaiy olavTol xp^^^^t ovroi 5e koI avrovs Aeyovm, nav
elvai a5vi>dTov (pBopav KUTaS^^aadaL, k&v eV Trolais \_K&i' oiroiais .'] v\LKa7sTrpd^€at
dTToiais ffvyKaTayei/ufTai irpd^iaiv. tu Karayivui/Tai. /.i.ri5hv avrovs irapa^Kdir-
yap Tp6irov xpi^ffos iv ^op^dpcfi KUTare- rfaOai, firjSi dirol3d\\eiv Tr]v iTVfvfxari-
6e]s ovic airofidWeL rrjv Ka\Kov7]v avrov, ktjv viroffTaatu. S. Epipll. adv. liter.
dA.A.a Tijj/ iSiai' (pvffiv SiacpvAdTrei, rov lib. i. heer. 31. torn. i. p. IS'J, edit.
^op^dpov i-i-qSkf dSi/cjjo-oi hvya.jjihou tov Paris. 1G22.
12G Tokens wlierehy the Holy Spirit may be known,
S E R M. either of none at all, or every tliii'd year of a new religion.
yiir .. .. " ....
'— This is the spirit of the worlds and we think it is Avisety done
too, to follow no spirit, to put no religion in practice but what
may stand with our own ends of safety and ease.
But after all these and above them all, the most common
misleading spirit is oiu* own private spirit, against which
St. Peter has directly opposed the Spirit of God, when we
cannot get it out of men's heads but that then' own ghost
is the Holy Ghost, and leads them as He would lead them ;
this spawn, this, of that spirit of pride, and no other, where-
with the old Donatists were possessed in St. Austin's time,
who gave it out boldl}^ and would not be controlled s. Quod
nos volumus, illud sanctum est, the way that we go is holy and
right, and no way besides. Therefore, saith St. Austin, every
one of them went a several way, they had every man a way
to himself, and agreed in nothing, but that they all went
wrong. Let this be the spirit that leads us and we shall
have leaders enough, so many spirits so many leaders too ;
1 Cor. 12. and then may St. Paul's Spiritus idem et unions go take His
leave.
Jer. 1 5. 19. Well then, what shall we now do to sever the precious from
1 Cor. 12. the vile? to discern the leading Spirit of God from all other
10 .... o J.
misleading spirits whatsoever, to set Hie est upon the right
spirit ?
There be many good signs in Scripture to know Him by ; I
will tell you them that will not fail you, and so send you to
them away, for the time would fail me if I should go any
further.
Iloni.8.13. One is St. Paul's sign, set there at the door of the text, the
verse before. It leads you out to war against the flesh and
to mortify the lusts of it ; your pride and mahce, your self-
will and envy ; your fornication, uncleanness, wantonness, and
the rest of that rabble. It is surely the Spirit of God, the
Gal. 5. 17. right Spirit that leads you, for the Spirit is ever at enmity
with the flesh, ever Avarring and fighting against it, as other
spirits are not; for take ye what spirit ye will besides, and ye
shall ever note them to make much of their flesh for all their
spirit, to put it on fine clothes, I'll warrant you, and to
pamper it well ; otherwhiles to dress it like a pageant too,
s See Andrewes' Sermons, vol. iii. p. '275.
He is the Spirit of stlf-inortificution and peace. 127
and walk after it to any vanity, wheresoever it will lead them.
This spirit seduces many ; but it is a wicked onCj it is none
of this that comes from God.
Of it the second sign shall be Zacharias' sign, in the Bcne-
dictus. If it be Christ's Spirit, the Spirit Tliat He sent to-
day to lead us, He will be ever guiding our feet into the way Lu. i. 7!).
of peace ; not of questions and disputations about we know
not what, as the pretenders to the Spirit do now ; not about
strifes and controversies in certain subtile points, whereof there
is no end, and about which we weary ourselves, some of us, all
our life long; but in viam pads, leads us only into the way
wherein there is peace, even to tread those paths, and to do
such duties about which none will dispute, none call into
question, but that they are to be done without any contro-
versy at all. This is a sui'e sign ; if our delight be to walk
in the ways of this peace, doing those things that are plain
and necessary to be done, and whereof all parts agree, it is
the Spu'it of God That leads us, in that way we follow Him.
But, as the use is, if we love rather to be treading mazes in
religion, to be still disputing with strife and doing nothing
with obedience and quiet, it is a shrewd sign we follow our
own spirit and are not led by the Spirit of God.
Look but into this feast, see His sign, see where He dwells
at the very beginning of the Epistle to-day, ' And they were Acts 2. 1.
all together with one accord in His house,' not whetting their
wits to dispute, not filing their tongues to talk, but setting
their feet into this way of peace ; and suddenly, says the text,
the Holy Ghost came upon them. He is a Spirit that loves
6/jio6vfMa8bv, the plain way of peace. Again, look but into
His type before this, ' And the Spirit of God came down upon Mat. 3. 16.
Him like a dove,' the emblem and the sign of peace too.
They who would have Him come down like a vulture and
devour all up that are not of their minds, or like the Roman
eagle to tear all Churches and kingdoms in pieces that will
not stoop to them, I wonder by what spii-it they are led.
Surely, nescitis ciijus spiritus, may be a fit answer to them. Lu. 9. 55.
A third sign of Him ; and that is of Christ's own setting
up, a little before He went up to heaven Himself. If He be
the Spirit of God, by which Ave are led, we may ever and
anon be calling out to Him to direct us in our way; to
128 The Holy Spirit makes men f miff id in good works.
S R R M. counsel us as \\ c go. ' Wheu the Comforter is come/ says
__-^_iy:_ Christy ' He will teach you all things, what ye have to do ;'
° ■ ■ ' where we have two characters of Him. We will go to Him
for counsel to direct us, as well as for comfort to relieve us ;
we will not let Him alone, as we do the physician, till we
grow sick and come near the hour of our death, till we begin
to faint by the way and can go no further ; but we will make
a teacher, a counsellor of Him too, all our life long, we will
call Him to us and pray Him to look on us in every step we
take, we will question with Him in particular in every action
we do, have private conference with Him about the estate of
our souls, whether they be in the way or no, or whether they
be in error and sin. And they that do not so, let them take it
for a rule, Christ will never take them to be led by His Spirit,
nor St. Paul here by the Spirit of God.
1 Cor. 12. Let us take another sign from liim, Hac omnia oj)eratur
Spiritus, and with that will we make an end; for all that
should be said of this Spirit, and the rules to knoAv Him by,
cannot be said at once ; and I doubt not you Avill hear of Him
again to-morrow and the next day, the mysteries being so
great, and the lessons so many, that concern Him, that the
Church has for that cause purposely appointed more days for
Him than one'^.
To St. Paul's operatur then, which is the surest sign of all.
If the Spirit of God lead us. He will always keep us in action;
as we go Ave will have ever somewhat to do well, and be still
kept to work under Him the works of God. For as each
Mat. 7. 20. spirit besides, so has this His proper work ; and by their
works ye shall knoAv them. So the Avork of this Spirit, and
of them that are led by Him, saith the Apostle, are manifest;
Gal. 5. 22. are joy, and love, and peace, and mercy, and meekness, and
faith, and temperance, and piety, and purity; against such
there is no exception, but that they are led by the Spirit of
Christ. And if Ave hve in the Spirit, let us also Avalk and
Gal. ,'5.25. '^^'ork in the Spirit; it is the same Apostle. But Avho ever
heard that the Avorks of the flesh, Avhich is enmity with God,
came from the Spirit of God ? Let no man deceiAX us ; the
works of uncleanness come not from the holv, but from the
unclean spirit. The works of dai-kncss come not from the
!■ Namely, the Monday and Tuesday in AVhitsun week.
The Christian must forsake evil ivorks. 129
spirit of liglitj nor the works of ci'ror and deceit from tlic
spirit of truth. I niiglit enlarge here far. Not the Avorks of
enxy and maHce from the spirit of love and meekness ; not
the works of Cain and Judas from the spirit of piety and
peace; not any works of the devil from tlie Spirit of God.
We learn as much at the ver}'^ door of the Churchy at the
font of Baptism, when ye come to clu'isten j^our children,
that is, to baptize them with the Holy Ghost and to put them
under His conduct, I trow thev must first forsake the devil
and all his works', or else Baptism they get none, the Holy
Ghost will not lead them. And look, as it Avas at Aour
Baptism, so will it be all your life long ; those works must be
left, or else the Spirit of God is none of your leader, some
other spirit is, I named Cain and Judas, I Avill name no
more. When Cain murmured against his brotlier for offering Gen. 4. r,.
so fat a sacrifice, a fatter than he; Avlien Judas grudged and Joh. 12. 4.
accused, and put up au indictment against Mar}^ Magdalene's
superfluity and superstition, because she bestowed so much
cost upon Christ^s body, nay, because he would have had the
money to put up within his own pouch, trow ye it was the
love of Christ that led them, or the love of themselves ? Kav,
an ye would see the spirit of envy lead a man by the ears,
look upon Cain and Judas, and such as they are; their Avorks
Avill sheAv it.
And what we say for works we may say for words also, the
words be not so sure ; yet this is sure, that if it be the Spirit
of God that sits upon our tongues, as He came in that shape Acts 2. 3.
to-day, to guide and rule them as they go, (for they go too
in their way otherwhiles faster than fit,) our language Avill be
as our Avorks are, holy and religious, and such (as St. Paul Phil. 1.27.
saith) becometh saints. But if cm-sing and bitterness, the l^°"^-^^-2-
eloquence of this country ; if many a foul and fearful oath,
the language of these times ; if obscene and idle communica-
tion proceed out of oiu* mouths, it is a plain sign, our very
speech bewrays us, that we are led by the evil speaker, and
in Greek his name is Sta/3oXo9 ; but they that are led by the
Spirit here of the text, the Spirit of this day, have some other
language.
Works, and words, and thoughts, will make up all ; but I
' Exhortation to godfatliers and godmothers in the Baptismal Service.
COSIN. g^
130 The Holy Spirit present in the EucJiarist.
s i<: 11 M. ^vill not speak of tlicm, since in tlie best evil tlioiiglits may
* arise and be repelled again, and then do they no hnrt ; if we
war against them and assent not to them, this Spirit will
lead us still. I should now come to say that those whom
He thus leads, and those who are thus led hy Him, and
resist Him not, that they are the sons of God, they, and
none but they. But this will ask another hour, and so
another time.
Of the Sacrament yonder somewhat would be said too.
But now I think of it, most of us use not to stay it out, and
for them that do use it, the Church itself has appointed pre-
faces and exhortations better than I can frame any. Yet
this let me say for it, out of the text, that they who are led
by the Spirit of Christ, are led also by the Sacrament of
Christ, Avhere His Spirit is ; and at least 1 am sure are not
led fi'om it whenever they come near it. For there, if ever,
2Pet. 1.4. we are made the sons of God and partakers of the Divine
nature by the power of the Spirit. To which Spirit, with the
Father and the Son, three persons and one ever-blessed and
immortal God, be all honour and glory, &c. Amen.
SERMON IX.
BRANSPETH, JUI.Y 8, 1(532.
PRiECEPTUM PRIMUM, CONCIO PRIMA.
^D|utotium nostrum (n ifiomtnc 33omlnl.
Exodus xx. 3.
Non habebis deos alienos coram Me.
Thou shalt have no other gods before Mjj face, or, no other
gods but Me.
The last time, if you remember, we stood here to shew you
the outward frame of the Decalogue ; considered how aptly,
how orderly, every thing was placed and disposed in it;
taught you how to number, how to divide, how to order the
commandments. It is time how that we went in to take a
\-iew of every several commandment by itself.
That view, God enlightening and assisting us, shall be first
set upon the words themselves, to see how they are to be
understood and explained in every precept; then upon the
several duties of the precept, to see what God in every one
requires, and will exact at our hands ; and lastly, upon the
various violations and transgressions of the precept, to see
how and wherein we maj, and daily do, offend against every
one of them.
And truly I judge this, especially for them that be of the
ruder sort and simple, to be the readiest and the fittest way
of instruction, that they may plead no ignorance against us,
and say they were never taught what the duties and the
breaches of the law were, or if they do, that we may plead
with Moses against them and say. Behold we call heaven and Dcut. 30.
2 1 J.
132 Division of the subject.
s K R M. earth this day to record that we liave set before you both
IX "
■ — the one and the other, both Hfe and death, both blessing and
cursing, the duties commanded, and the sins forbidden in
every precept of the Law.
And we begin this day with the first ; wherein to keep the
order and method proposed (I.) for the explanation, first, of
the Avords we shall have somewhat to say of habebis, and
somewhat of aJienos, and somewhat of every word of moment
in the text.
(II.) Then for the duties enjoined. Three propositions
naturally and plainly arising from the words themselves;
the first out of habebis, that we miist have a God; the
second, out of Me, that we must have the true God; the
third out of alienos, that we must have Him alone, and no
other ;
And (III.) lastly, as many for the sins here forbidden.
(1.) Profaneness, opposed to God, (2.) false worship, opposed
to the true God, (3.) and mixed worship, opposed to God
alone. This is the sum, and these the parts of which we are
to speak ; though we shall not speak of all to-day, but of
some Ave shall. And of which that we may speak to the
honour of Almighty God, &c. &c.
THE BIDDING OF THE COMMON PRAYERS.
Pater Noster, ^-c.
There are in this commandment three words, the three
first words, Tu non habebis, that would be first observed.
The first, common with this to all the rest, that they aU
run in the second person singular, Tu ; and the other,
common to all but two, that they run negatively, ' shalt not,'
and run in the future tense, non habebis, non fades, non
assumes, non occides, &c. And before we go any fiu'ther,
somewhat would be learnt even out of this.
(1.) Out of the first ; that God's law, this and the rest, runs
in the second person singular, Audi Israel, tu non habebis,
speaking to all Israel, and to all the world besides, as to one
single man, this we learn, that God's laws appertain to all
men alike. In other laws, some men are excepted; in this
of His, not any, but all made equal, all made as one, and iu
Comprehensiveness of God's commandments. 133
respect of the law, or the bond to observe the law, no
respect of persons had. Therefore, Tu, here, the word 'Thoii,'
is as forcible as if there were so many Tit's, and the word as
oft repeated as there be men and women in the world ; Tu
to the meanest, and Tu to the greatest among us all; that
none of us all might sooner hear it than apply it to ourselves,
and say, ' See ye, I am the man the commandment is directed
to, is spoken to me as well as to any one besides ; for what
difference or distance soever there be kept between us in
other matters, yet in this of obedience and service to God,
Tu makes us all equal.' Tu is as every man, and every man
as one. Therefore as it was given to the basest and meanest
of the army, to the very outcast of the people, (lest they
should take themselves to be exempted, as commonly the
more base, the more presumptuous and lawless,) so it Avas
given to the captains and leaders of the army, as well, to
Moses and Aaron and to the elders of the people, (lest they
also should tliiuk themselves privileged,) not one exempted,
not one in this made better or greater than another. In
other cases, those that are greater than their fellows, and can
master others, thiuk themselves free from laws ; at least that
the laws are made but like cobwebs, for them, where the
hornets break through and the poor flies are catched ; how-
ever the meaner men must hear and suffer for their faults,
yet that nobody must say Tu to them, 'Thou art the man.' 2 Sam. 12.
So is it with us ; but so is it not here ; for by virtue of this ' "
non habebis here, and non mcBchaberis afterwards, Nathan
would tell David, Tu es homo ; and John the Baptist reprove 2 Sam. 12.
Herod with non licet tibi ; kings though they were, yet Tu ''
here was for them both.
(2.) The next is, that both this, and most an end the rest
of the commandments, are put and given unto us in the nega-
tive, non habebis, and noyi assumes ; telling us what we shall
not do, by way of prohibition, rather than what we should
do, by way of precept. And therein two lessons have we to
learn, two observations to make. The first is, that the com-
mandments are so much the stronger by a rule we have in
logic. Quia ad plura se extendit negatio quam affirmatio ;
negatives go further than affirmatives, for they bind most
strictly, sempei' et ad semper ; and God would have His com-
134 Affirmative laws implied in negative.
S E R M. manclracnts go as far, and bind as sure, as any rules of
'— — extension would set them. Whereof one rule is, tliat qui
prohibit imjjedimentum pi'cecipit adjumentum, the affirmative
is included in the negative; another, qui neyat prohibens juhet
promovens, ye may know what it is God would have you to
do, by that which He says He woiild not have you to do ;
removing the impediment, by the negative, that the precept
may be kept the better, and performed in the affirmative.
Therefore every commandment being negative but two,
Christ in the Gospel has reduced them all to their two
affirmatives; and as much may be said for them that are
affirmative likewise, by the rule a contrariis, so that every
commandment indeed is both the one and the other. And*
by the use of these rules it is, that the Rabbins have gathered
two hundi'cd and forty-eight affirmative commandments from
the books of Moses, answerable to the number of the members
and joints in a man's body, Avhich they call Pracepta fades,
the duties that we are to do, and three hundred and sixty-
five negatives, answerable to the number of the days of the
year, which they call Prcecepta non fades, the offences and
sins that we are to avoid, (both the numbers making up the
number of the letters that are contained in the Decalogue,)
and thereby teaching us (though in a mystical yet in a good
sense) that all the members of the body and all the davs of
our life are to be employed and spent in the diligent study
and observation of the holy commandments of God.
Besides this, there is another note to be taken from this
negative; and it is to shew us how unfit our nature is to
receive a commandment to do any thing, till by a counter-
mand the opposite impediments, and such things as will
hinder us from doing, be first removed from us. Such is the
evil indisposition of our corrupt and depraved nature, full of
weeds and thorns as it is, that being incapable of good seed,
before the ground be cleansed and the weeds rooted up, God
* Distinguunt Ilebraei prsecepta in stituuiit, quot sunt in anno dies, nempe
dupliceniordinem. AliavocantpnBcepta 36i5, qua; siniul cum artirinativis con-
faciendi, quae nos affirmativa appella- stituunt (j 1 3, ad qu;i' expienda erant a
mus ; qu;c tot esse asserunt, quot sunt lege instituta duo sacriiiciorum genera,
membra in corporo humano, nempe scilicet, pro peccato et pro delicto.
'24'8. Alia vocantpraecepta non faciendi, Oleastri Comment, in Pentateuch, p.
qua? nos dicimus negativa, quae tot con- 311, edit. Lugd. 1589.
The commandments jjrosjjective. 135
saw it good and requisite thus to proceed witli us ; like as
■when we arc to rear a building ourselves, if any thing has
taken up tlie place already, where it is to stand, we pull it
down, or cut it up, and remove all impediments out of the
way ; if the ground be not steady to build, we drain it ; if
the body be not fit to receive nourishment, we purge it ; if
the field be not fit to sow on, we lay it fallow and Aveed it.
It is the course God has taken here in the very beginning,
removing that by a negative, which might otherwise hinder
the affirmative precepts of His law; that because we are born
in evil, and are naturally more prone unto it than unto any
good, therefore by these prohibitions we are called from all
corruption to the integrity wherein He first created us.
(3.) And now we come to the third; that this and the rest
of the commandments (all but two, the fourth and the fifth,
and the fourth but in part, excepted neither) are given us in
the future tense, 'Thou slialt not/ not in the imperative
present, as other laws of our own run ; which, as it is ever a
secret exprobation of our sins and transgressions past, that
whatsoever we will be for the time to come, it may well be
known bv this, what we have been in times before : so it is
a good admonition to us withal, for the time still future, for
the days that we have to live hereafter ; though we have done
amiss and dealt wickedly in times past, and therefore should
now give over, yet such is the growing and successive
wickedness of our nature, that even in time to come we are
then as ready to do wickedly, and to break the command-
ments of God as we v/ere before; we are caught in our own
speech, we say we will do it even when we are but now about
to do mischief, as if we meant not to leave ofl' for once, but
continue so doing still. Therefore to our faciam and our
habebo, that occurs so often in our speech and actions, for
the future it was requisite that God should set His non fades
and non habebis in the future tense too, to meet with us both
now and hereafter, as long as we shall have any future time to
live; and to warn us withal, that though we do well never
so long, yet if we continue not so doing till there be no more
future time to come with us, we shall not be discharged of
the law, but non habebis and non facias will be of force
against us still. Now we have done with these three, Avhich as
12. Is. 43.
12
136 Idolatry may be internal as ivell as external.
S E ]i M. tliev have served for this, so thev shall serve for all the rest
IX . "^
'■ — of the commandments ; I will repeat them no more.
This commandment is against idolatry. Idolatry is either
inward or outward ; for the mind and the heart can set up
an idol, and commit idolatry within, as well as the body and
the knee without; therefore for outward idolatry, order is
taken in the second commandment, for inward in this ; and
God would the rather make two commandments of them, for
that the world might know all idolaters are not alike, nor all
idolatry condemned and left when men have left off bowing
to images, or condemn them that so do never so fast, for
then the hypocrite might go free, and at home in secret
commit what idolatry he listed. The heart makes the idol
as well as the hand, and God hates the one as well as the
other.
Deut. 32. All such idols are here termed deos alienos, strange gods ;
quasi res alienantes a Deo, things that Avithdraw us from the
love, or honour and worship of the true God.
See Poli We Say deos alios, ' no other gods,' as the Septuagint
loo^"^^' "' renders it, and it is the fuller expression, that is, none at all
besides, for that He is all in all Himself. ' None but Me/
as the Greek and Chaldee translate it; 'none before Me,' as
the Latin; ^ none against Me,' ' none before jNIy face,' as the
Hebrew, the original, bears it ; that hereby we may know, in
all times, and in all places, God will never endure to have
any thing either more or as much regarded as He is to be
Himself; coram facieb us meis,ssijs the Hebrew, in the plural
number, for the gods we use be many, and the looks He has
no less, to eye them all, though never so secret, and to out-
face them all, though never so many.
For the better conceiving whereof, and of the sense of this
Avhole commandment, it is needful we ask and resolve two
questions; the first, how we may be said to have another
God, when there is no other to have but Him ? the second,
how we may be said not to have Him to be our God, when,
Avliether we will or no, our God He is ?
Other gods are no gods at all, are nothing, ('We know
1 Cor. 8. 1. that an idol is nothing,' saitli St. Paul,) and where nothing is,
we say nothing can be had. This is the question ; the reso-
lution is, that though in themselves they be nothing, yet in
How we may have other yods. 137
our account cand estimation tliey may be somewhat. There-
fore the words are^ non erunt tibi, Ye shall have no other to
yourselves, for without this, sure and true it is, that there
are no others to have. It is then thereafter as a man's re-
gard is, so is his god; not so, simph', but so had, or not had,
that is, had, or set up in oiu' own account ; or not had,
neglected and laid aside, as not esteeming them at all. And
this answers both the questions at once. If we regard any
thing more than God, it is another god unto us ; and again,
if we regard not Him and Ilis will above all. He is no God
to us at all, none as far as we can make Him none, for other-
wise our only God He is, and shall be so for ever. It is in
this case, as between a rebel and his prince, he would have
another to be king, that other is as good as nothing, for the
prince says there is no other king but himself; and though
the rebel would not have it so, would set up another, and
therefore hath him not, or at least, would not have him to
himself, yet the truth is, he hath no other king but him
indeed, and shall still have him to be his king, whether he
accounts him so or not; and this is the case between God and
us. When we would exempt ourselves from His service we
rebel against Him, we set up another God at home in our
hearts, and we regard Him not, we have Him not, that is, we
have Him not as we shoidd have Him, in that honour, and
fear, and regard, as becometh us; for otherwise we have Him
and shall have Him, whether we will or no. And again the
philosophers say well, that then a thing is had when it is
known to be had, otherwise not ; for if a man hath a treasure
hid in his ground which he knows not of, he is never said to
have it. And then a people that know not God, that are
ignorant both of Him and His precepts too, how can they be
said to have Him? Again, no man is said to have that
whereof he makes no account, as of cobwebs and straws in
GUI' houses ; we are not reckoned to have them in our inven-
tory, because we make no reckoning of them at all, because
we care not whether we have them or no, we had rather be
rid of them than have them to trouble us. Into either of
these two then if we fall, either not knowing God, (as the
nations that knew Him not, saith the Psalmist,) or not Ps. 79. 6.
regarding His will, as the worldly men that despise Him, to
138 Wliat it is to ' have' God.
SERM. have tlicii" own, fall we upou the breach of this first com-
— — mandment. And now we come to our propositions, that
natui'ally arise out of the precept. Three atfirmative first,
and then three negative.
(1.) That plain it is, out of this precept we are to have a
God, opposed to atheism, that has none.
(2.) Then the true God, opposed to a false religion, that
sets up the Avrong one.
(3.) And lastly, the true God alone, opposed to a mixed
religion, that sets up many besides Ilim.
The first is for religion itself, the second for the truth of
religion, and the third is for the sincerity and integrity of
religion; all which we shall be bound to learn and observe, if
■we mean to learn and keep this first commandment of the
law. I will despatch one of them to-day, and by the rest ye
may know my method and intent hereafter.
' Fomieriy Erewhiles' I compared the law of God to a building; in a
building the foundation must be first laid, and this is the
foundation here of all that follow's, the first proposition, that
we must have a God; wherein I doubt not but we shall all
agree with the Psalmist, to condemn him for a fool that says,
I's. 14. 1. There is no God. The very heathen themselves woidd not
say it; and if any did, says Tully*^, there was a fire made to
make him away. But then, if there be one, and in the mean
Avhile we have Him not, we are never a Avhit the nearer.
The duty here is to 'have' Him. What is that? To know
Him, to acknowledge and love Him, to recognise His
supreme dominion over us, to give Him worship and honour,
to yield Him fear and obedience, to be ruled by His Avill, to
live by His laws ; this is to have a God.
Indeed this to have Him, that we have not ourselves, and
become our ow'n gods ; for our own gods we become when we
be not guided by Him. If there be not a superior will over
us to rule and control ours, or if our wills be our own, and
(ieii. 3. 5. (as the devil told the woman) if we may judge of good and evil,
as we like best om-selves, according to the mind we have, or
'' Perhaps the following is the pas- posuisset, ' De diis, iieque lit sint, ne-
sage referred to. Nam Ahderitcs qui- que ut non siut, habco dicere,' Atheni-
dam Protagoras, cujus a te modo mentio ensiuni jussu urbe atque agro est exter-
faeta est, sophistes teniporibus illis vel ininatus, librique ejus in coucione com-
niaximus, euiii in prineipio libri sic busti. De natura Deor. i. 23.
Practical atheism as ivell as theoretical. 139
luave not, towards it, in any duty that belongs us ; then arc
we the gods ourselves, and a God above us acknowledge -wc
none. Therefore eritis dii struck right here, and the devil Oca. 3. 5.
said true in tliat sense, that they should be gods ; for they
did their own will, and not His ; and in that very respect
were gods to themselves.
The duty then enjoined, ye see, that the will of God be our
will ; that His law be our rule and guide, and then we have
Him.
The sin opposed and forbidden, other men call atheism ;
but because we all confess a God, whether we have Him or
no, we Avill call this sin profancness. When though there be a
God, we will have none for all that ; no god, nor no law to
control our own liking ; but every man will be a god and a
law to himself, to do that only which seems good in his own
eyes, like the sons of Belial in the book of Judges, that did Judg. 17.
every one what they had a lust to do themselves, when there ^;^ " '
was no king in Israel to rule them. It is that the world
labours for, and everv man studies with himself how to bring
it to pass, even at this day ; not to be in subjection under
any commandments whatsoever, not to have a yoke upon
them, nor to be forced nor bound to any thing but what they
are wilhng to do of themselves, and then they say it would
be a merry world. A merry, or a miserable ? for then the
first thing they did, they would sm-ely raze out this first com-
mandment, they would have no director, no lawgiver, no
commander, no God at all ; or if they had, he should be such
a one as would take care to provide only for their ease, and
not for his own honour ; and that would exact no ser\-ice from
their hands, nor no works from their hands, but specially
and above all, no tribute from their purses ; one that would
fill their bellies and clothe their bodies, and not be too curious
about their souls, or their religion howsoever; in sum, one
that would command them nothing which is unpleasing, nor
forbid them any thing which they have a mind to follow.
But be it far from the just to harbour these thoughts, or to
follow the gross and bestial conceits of these ungodly men.
It is the sin of profaneness, forbidden here with the first,
and directly opposed to the having and acknowledging of a
God over us, that gives Him honour neither quern, nor (juan-
140 Profaneness not less dangerous because concealed.
S E R M. turn ojjortet, but as if all were notliing; make no more of Ilis
' • laws, nor no other esteem of religion, than Esau did of his
34_"" ■ birthright, that sold it all away to fill his belly ; but whom
the Holy Ghost, notwithstanding, for setting so light a price
upon it, hath condemned for a profane person by the words
Heb. 12. of St. Paul.
Indeed profaneness, in our usual apprehension and lan-
guage, is now-a-days restrained to the fury only of that wicked
brood, whose irreligious humoiu" is boldly to scoff at Heaven ;
and by their wicked and licentious mouths eveiy Avhere to set
abroach what their untamed lust suggesteth to them. But
there be more profane persons than they. Those that shut
their mouths never so soberly, and yet carry the bit in their
teeth within, that they may run where they list and have
none of these laws, we preach to them to bridle them, and to
keep them in, either to the shewing of any honour to God,
or to the due performance of His worship and ser\ace, (which
are the duties of this precept,) they come within the number
of profane persons, express breakers of this commandment,
as well as the rest; and though, peradventui'e, their sayings
be not so open and so gross, yet, in another kind, their
doings, their wilfulness, their neglect, their grudging, their
contempt and slighting of things sacred, is as ill as theirs.
This is their sin; and if the punishment were now added
that of old was annexed to this sin, ut ne prof anus intra fanum
venerit, that they who so lightly regard their God, should
have no benefit from Him, should never come into His
courts, nor know what religion nor things sacred were, there
might be some hope of amends ; and yet the punishment
most an end is slighted as much as the sin itself is, while
common people account it rather a pleasure than a punish-
ment to be kept from the temple ; and therefore, if nobody
Avill do it for them, they will do it without you of themselves.
And think ve that thev have a God that do so? Let them
Mai. 1. (J. answer the prophet Malachi, whether they have or no. If
He be a God, where is His honoiu'? where the honour of
His person, or the fear of His laws ; and ye have scoffed, ye
have snufi;cd at it, saith the Lord of Hosts. In effect, such
men would be gods to themselves, and have none besides to
govern thcra.
Punishnient accompanies j)y of aneness. Ill
The punishment we spake of before, of being kept from
God or His worship, that care not for it, works but httle. I
■will tell you of another kind of punishment usually annexed
to this sin, more likely to work upon the common people, and
to aflfect them to some better purpose than the other ; it shall
be corporal punishment, if that or the fear of that may do
any good (for other punishment regard they none ;) and with
that will we end both this point and this time together.
The Scripture tells iis of such sons of Behal that scorned Dcut. 13.
all religion, and would have neither God nor Lord over them ; {i^'^yif'
and what became of them? the flood came and swept them 20. I3,&c.
away ; the fire came and devoured them up ; the sea opened 22. "
and overwhelmed them all, the earth opened and carried {;^''-j^'^:,g'
them quick into hell. So heinous a sin was it, not to Num. lo.
acknowledge their God, or to dally with religion.
The historians tell us no less. Diagoras'^ was a professed
atheist, we Avill not mention him; but Phericydes the
Syrian, of whom Diogenes Laertius'^ writes that he was
never so impudent as to deny there was a God ; but one day
making jollity among his fellows, and boasting that God
never got either prayer, or offering, or gift, or sacrifice from
him, the word was no sooner gone from him, but as Ilerod in
the Acts, he was smitten by an Angel of God, and eaten up
with lice. Lucian^ was another of the brood, a profane
scoffer tliat neither regarded God nor any of His precepts ;
being once abroad and having newly vented his scorn of
religion, to others that stood by, the very dogs (wherein his
chief delight was) being fast shut up at home, brake all loose
on the sudden, and came and tare him in pieces. Julian *" the
apostate was such another as he ; his lewdness this way was
notorious, his end was no less, when in his army being
stricken with an arrow, he rent out his own guts with it, and
cast his blood into the air with blasphemy. I could tell you
of the Florentine s abroad that rotted away by piece-meal, and
of Hacket^ here at home, that would needs have no other
= Diagoras, atheos qui dictus est, 457, edit. Cantab. 1705.
posteaque Theodoras, iionne aperte ' Sozom. vi. 2. p. 220. edit. Reading,
deorum naturam sustulerunt ? Cicero e Namely, Machiavelli ; see Bayle's
de natura Deor. I.i. § 23: see also § 42. Diet. p. 2079, edit. 1710.
'' Dio^. Laert. i. 74, edit. Mcibomii, •" See Camden's Annals of Elizabeth,
Amst. 1692. in Rennet's Complete History, ii. 5ii3,
<= See Suidas in voc. \ovKiav6s, ii. 564.
142 Inference from the doctrine.
s E R M. God but himself, and died upon the gibbet, no wretch more
'— — miserable. I say no more, but feelix quem faciunt, and that
which the heathen man set upon Sennacherib's tomb', e'9 e/xe
T19 opewv, €va€/3r](; ecrTo). ^Vliosoever sees or hears any of"
these, let him learn to acknowledge a God, to have Him in
regard, and to be ruled by His laws; which God of His
infinite goodness grant that we may, and by the power of
His grace and Spirit work in us effectually to perform, even
for His mercy's sake in Christ Jesus. To which undiWded
Trinity, three persons and one God, &c. &c.
' Herodot. Euterp. Ml.
SERMON X.
PIL'ECEPTUM PRIMUM, CONCIO SECUNDA.
Exodus xx. 3.
Non habebis deos alienos coram Me.
Thou shalt have no other gods but Me.
Three propositions we set forth, as natural]}' arising out
of this precept. The first out of the word habebis, that we
must haA'e a God, have Him in honour and regard, have Him
in account and estimation far above ourselves, and above all
things that we have besides. This the duty commanded,
opposed to the sin forbidden, the sin of atheism and pro-
faneness, whereby every one becomes a God to himself, and
will be tied to do no more than what seems good in his own
eyes alone. And thus far are we gone already, neither love
we to go backwards, nee repetere gradum.
We go on therefore to the second proposition, out of the
word Me. That it is not enough to have, unless we have the
ti'ue one; that instead of the right we set not up a wrong
god ; and where we should betake us to the verity of religion,
we fasten not upon a false worship, and a fond religion, that
God never taught us. Tliis the duty that we are to learn
to-day, wherein we shall have somewhat to say of the
heathenish, and somewhat of the Romish superstition and
impiety abroad, somewhat also of our own impiety and
superstition here at home. Against all which this precept
goeth forth. Against their idolatry, (so I will be bold to call
it now, and prove it afterwards,) their idolatry, I say, in
deifying men ; in believing, trusting, honouring, invocating,
some of them more than thev do God Himself. And then
144< Subjects hereafter to be discussed.
s E 11 M. against tlie relics of our own impiety ; for some relics we
'- — have among us, (it cannot he denied,) as well of the
heathenish as of the Romish superstition, left still in our
corrupt and depraved affections, specially in the affections of
the common people, such as some of you are, who he most
rude and ignorant, and, as ye say, will needs do as your fore-
elders did, though they deified their own fancies, and made
' a grand- morc account of an old beldame^s ' charm and a wizard's
see Nares. divining of things to come, than of all the oracles and laws
of God whatsoever. And here we shall have somewhat to say
against your custom of seeking after soothsayers and witches,
with other fond and superstitious observations among you ;
w^hereby ye transfer that power and honour to another thing
which properly belongs unto God ; and therefore shall stand
indicted as open offenders against this statute, the first com-
mandment of the law. Of these we are to say. But to the
end that what we say may be to the honour of God, and to
the amendment of our own faults, I shall, &c. &c.
THE BIDDING OF THE COMMON PRAYERS.
Pater Nosier.
Non habebis deos alios prater Me. The meaning is, that
any God, or any religion, will not serve us. The duty is,
that we seek out the true one ; that w^e set not up a false
God to worship, nor a wrong religion to follow. For there
be many religions, and many gods abroad in the world ; and
yet among them all, there is but one God, and one faith, and
one religion to hold by.
(1.) And first, I shall not need to say much about the
heathenish impiety, the gross and brutish idolatry that the
nations of old, and many of them at this day, commit against
this first commandment. It is strange to see and fearful,
how the devil blinded them, through ignorance and madness
together. They set up every one his own god, nay and every
one his several gods too, for all the purposes he had under
heaven. One god for his country, and another for his house;
one for his purse, and another for his painich ; they never
had gods enough ; and any thing that woidd do them good,
or that they thought might do them any hurt, whether it
PIuralHy of tjods among the heathen. 145
were man or ])cast, the stars above, or tlie very creeping
worms and herbs below, to that wonkl tliey offer sacrifice,
and pray as devoutly to it, as if all their woe and welfare
had depended upon it. An idle and an ignorant, and yet a
covetous and a base people were they, from whence all this
impiety proceeded.
The relics of Avhich impiety are not yet rooted out : to 'yap
rpi(f)ov /jLe, said he in Euripides, and by this we get our living, iTecui). ].
as said they in the Acts, are two rules that square men's ^^',1
religion still ; and any thing that will do them good, they 25.
are readv vet to offer it what sacrifice vou please.
But one thing I would have you heed ; it was for want of
knowledge that this impiety got head ; they were not diligent
to find out the true God, and the right way to worship Him,
and therefore they were content with any, the next that
came to hand.
In hac fide natus sum, in Jiac moriar, as Auxentius-'' was
wont to say, so did his elders before him, and there was all
the care he took. This was their case, and it is to be feared
lest the devil should make some of vour cases alike, while
they among you that are ignorant will be ignorant still, and
take no thought (so they may live and like) either what god
the}^ serve, or Avhat rehgion they profess.
(2.) We come to another impiety, that hath been the
offspring and issue of this; the impiety of some Christians
(I mean the Papists) that are ready to persuade some of you
to their own errors, and say that this is none of God's com-
mandments ; and that, I know not what or how many saints
may be worshipped and prayed to, as well as He. Wherein
that ye may conceive the vanity of that part of their re-
ligion the better, I will take the pains to compare it Avith
this kind of superstition, which of old time was used
among the heathens, against whom this precept of God went
forth.
The variety and multitude of the heathen gods was great,
(above whom, notwithstanding, they acknowledged one su-
preme lord, as the Papists do,) but for their inferior gods,
that, as they said, were better at leisure than he, would be
sooner spoken to, were his favoui'ites, would take care of what
" S. Hilarii 0pp. col. 1270, ed. Par. 1693.
COSIN. L
146 Instances of saints made
S E R M. tliey wanted here beloAV, of these, saith St. Austin'', thirty
: — thousand may be numbered; and his author was Varro.
Some of these were to teach them the secrets of nature, they
dwelt in an upper mansion (they say) above the sun ; and
others to expound them their dreams and fancies, these they
placed a rank lower, and said they had not so great a power
as the rest had. So some they called dii majores, the ancient
and the great gods, they that w^ere over many nations and
countries together ; others but dii minuti, and ascriptitii, that
were but lately let into the number, find had but the care of
men's persons, or their families, and towns at the most. So
that among them all, distribution was made of the whole
world to govern it ; some to help men by sea, and some to
have a care over them at land; some to dwell within their
woods, and others to be placed over their cities; some for
regions and provinces, and others for families and private
houses ; one for their corn, and another for their cattle ; the
rich, the poor, the artificer, every one had his god.
For all the Avorld as the practice is in Popeiy'", where for
every region, city, and family, for every man, and every
state and profession of men ; for every fruit of the earth,
every beast of the field, every disease of the body, they have
appointed a peculiar saint, to whom they pray as devoutly,
and from whom they expect help and defence as securely, as
from God Himself.
So the Spaniards call upon St. James, and the French
upon St. Denis ; the Germans they call iipon St. INIartin, and
the Hungars upon St. Lewis, as of old the Scots did upon
St. Andrew, and the English here upon St. George. These
for countries ; in cities, at Milan, St. i\mbrose is their patron,
'Cologne, and at Colon' the Three Kings; at Auspurg- St. Hulderic;
' Augs- ^y-^([ otherwhere St. Quintine, St. Valentine, St. Thomas, St.
burg.
John; here at home, St. Brandon'^ and St. Cuthbert^ have
been deified.
The mariners they call upon St. Nicholas, and St. Chris-
topher; the physicians upon St. Luke; the lawyers upon
^ S. August, de Civit. Dei, iii. 12: of Branspath, where this sermon was
vi. 2, &c. preached. See Hutchinson's Hist, of
•^ See Gerhard. Confessio Catholica, Durham, iii. 312, ed. Carlisle, 1794.
p. lOOfi, edit. l()7f». "^ The patron saint of the diocese of
"^ St. Brendan was the patron saint Durham.
I
special patro7is by the Romanists. ]4'7
Ivo, the gentlemen upon St. George, the tradesmen upon
St. Loy, St. Crispin, St. Gutman, St. Eustace, and a hundred
more hesides.
The care of their vineyards they commend to St. Urban, of
tlieir horse to St. Loy, of their hogs to St. Antony, of their
oxen to Pelagius, and of their pullaine^ to "Wendehn. » poultry.
Whcn*^ they Avould not have their corn hirrt by tempest "'^'^ '^^^^'
they hold up and fall doM-n to St. John the Evangelist; when
they fear biu'ning by fire, St. Agatha is their goddess ; and
when they fear the plague, they run to St. Sebastian for
mercy and pity to be shewn upon them ; when they are
troubled with a fever, they call upon St. Petronellc ; and
when their teeth pain them, they bemoan themselves to
St. Apoline. St. Felicitie is called upon for children, St.
Margaret for a safe delivery, and St. Barbaric for a good
departure out of the world. It were infinite to number up
all. But I troAv this is sufficient to shew their vanity, their
impiety, their manifest contempt and breach of this precept,
when they have so many gods to run to, so many helpers to
trust to besides One ; and let no man deceive you, they that
hold of this religion, they hold of a wrong one, and one that
will deceive them all at last.
Neither shall their distinction of 'oblique^ and 'relative,'
of indirect and transitory, of secondary and mediate prayers
serve their tui'n, for the world can never be got to believe
that oblique and relative prayers (such as we v.ould use to
holy men here upon earth) is all that is sought for, seeing it
is most CAident, both by their practice abroad, and their con-
tinual use here at home, to pray directly, absolutely, and
finally to their saints, as to them that had as much power as
God Himself, to give and forgive them what they will ask^.
' Compare with this, the following A similar but more extended cata-
extract from White against Fisher, p. logue is given by Gerhard, Locc. Com.
344, fol. Loud. 1624. — Apollonia is for de Morte, § 353, (torn, xviii. p. 69,
the toothache, Otilia for bleared eyes, edit. Cotta?,) too long to transcribe, but
S. Rochus for the poxe, Erasmus for agreeing in most points with the parti-
the iliac passion, Blasius for the quin- culars mentioned by Cosin.
sey, Petronilla for fevers, S. "Wendelin e Tliis is admitted by Azorius, Tho-
is for sheep and oxen, S. Anthony for log. Moralis, I. ix. cap. 10. Sanctos
hogs, S. Gertrudis for mice and rats, non solum honoramus eo cultu quo
S. Nicholas is the patron of sailors, S. viros virtute, sapientia, potentia, aut
Clement of bakers, S. George of horse- qualibet alia dignitate prjEstantes ; sed
men, S. Eulogius of smiths, S. Luke of etiam divino cultu et honore, qui est
painters, S. Cosmas of physicians, &c. religionis actus. Nam ille cuitus qui
L 2
148 Direct invocation addressed to the blessed Virgin.
s E R M. They say to the blessed Virgin, ' O holy Mother of God,
— '-^ — vouchsafe to keep us, we Avorship thy name, and that world
without end ; let thy mercy lighten upon us, as our trust is
in thee/ And again, 'In thee ouly^ (and what can be said
more to God ?) ' In thee only have I trusted, let me never be
confounded '\^ This to her; and to others, Tu dona coilum, Tu
perdue ad yloriam, pestem fuye, solve a peccatis, in direct and
plain terms, so absolute that I know not what can be more';
and sure I am, that we have no more for God, and for Clu'ist
Himself. Insomuch that we may be bold to conclude and
to assure you all, that whoever they be that practise them-
selves, or persuade an}^ other to use this kind of religion,
they do it by some other precept, for precept of God have
they none. ISTay this precept, this command of His, is
directly set up against them ; and though the memoiy of the
saints be precious among us, and ought so to be, though we
honour their glorified persons, though we sing, and praise,
and magnify theii" virtues, though we teach all generations
to call them blessed, yet for all this, the commandment of
God, and the glory of God, of their God and ours, is precious
to us above them all, and so let it be for ever ; and let all the
people say Amen.
I have done with the impiety, the breach of this command-
ment abroad, and now I am loath, nay I am sorry to find any
at home; but even amongst ourselves this precept is also
torn in pieces, and rehgion suffers violence from many of our
people, as well as it does from others, even in this very point
of Me and non alium ; for what shall we say other, what shall
we otherwise conceive of them, who, when they have neither
faith, hope, nor trust in God, know not His power, know not
viris primariis defertur, non est reli- inimicis meis libera me, domina. Ps. 7.
gionis, sed alterius longe inferioris vir- Conserva me, domina, quia speravi
tutis, quas observantia vocatur, actus in te. Ps 15.
et officium. Sed divinos cultus et In tc, domina, speravi, non confun-
honores sanrtis non damus propter dar in aeternum ; in gloria tua suscipe
ipsos, sed propter Deum, qui eos me. Ps. 30.
sanctos cffii'it. In te, domina speravi, non confun-
'' Tlie following extracts from the dar in jeternum ; in tua misericordia
Psalter of Cardinal Bonavcntura (in libera me et eripe me. Ps. 70.
which the expressions a})plicd by David See further Gibson's Preservative,
to our Lord are adapted to the Virgin) vol. iii. tit. ix. p. o2, &c.
bear out the accuracy of the statements ' See Gibson's Preservative, vol. iii.
in the text. tit. ix. p. 18t.
Domina mca, in te speravi ; de
Application to witches censured. 1-^9
His providence, nor have any care to learn tliem ncitlier, Ex. 7. ii.
(as it was Pharaoh's case and Saul's after him.) run to the i ^^"'- ~^'
soothsayers, and the woman witch of Endor, to ask help of
the Ae\i\ and so make a god of him. I trow this is as bad as
popery, if it be not worse ; and yet, as if it were good lawful
Christianity among us, we run to a wizard, that they may
ask the de^dl counsel for us, as readily, nay and a great deal
more readily too, many of us, than we run hither to God.
Two sorts of miscreant and wicked people we have ; the
first challenging and taking to themselves, the second attri-
buting and giving unto others, that power which only apper-
taineth unto God.
For there are, who if any grief or sickness befalls them, if
they happen to have any loss of children, or corn, or cattle,
or other goods whatsoever, are by and by exclaiming and
crjang out that they are bewitched, that such a woman has
done them harm, that such another can do them good; there-
fore to the one they seek for help, of the other they seek
revenge. And all this while God's commandment is not so
much as thought of, but to other helpers they run, as if there
were no God in Israel, That ordereth all things according to
His Avdll, in "Whose hands are life and death, sickness and
health, Avealth and woe, and Who hath therefore commanded
us in all our necessities to resort unto Him.
And what a scandal is it to the Gospel of Christ, to the
profession of our faith, that the glory and power of God
should be so abridged and abated, as to be thrust into the
hands or lips, or medicines, or charms of a lewd^ old woman, 'ignorant
woman or man, or whosoever ; that the power of the Creator
should be attributed unto any creature at all; that there
should be such gross and reckless presumption, either in the
one or the other, as to take Christ's office from Him, as to
take upon them to heal and cure diseases, to foretell things
to come, to tell the secrets of the mind, whereby He was
specially known, and made known to be God; that if any
happen to be somewhat strangely afflicted with diseases or
torments, or losses, such as are described in the New Testa-
ment, we fly from trusting in the Son and power of God, to
trusting in a witch, and believe in a charm, to rely upon the
power of a beldame, and the cunning of the devil. And if
150 Remedies to be empJoyed in trouble.
S E R M. any thing happen well, presently it must be attributed to
— ^^^ — that kind of skill, but if all fail, they are yet ready to think
they came rather an hour too late than went a mile too far ;
and truly if this be not to go a whoring after strange gods,
Ezek. C). [). I know not what is.
Sure I am it is the cunning and illusion of the devil, thus
to infatuate and besot the minds of gross and ignorant people
to the distrust of God, and to the destruction of their souls ;
for give it that by his wicked means, otherwhiles ye receive
help, either for body or goods, what comfort shall ye have in
them, what good get yc by it, to have your goods safe, and
your souls in danger of eternal perdition and torment ?
And let no man make excuse, that they think no hurt,
that they do it for no ill, and that they would be glad to have
help by any means they can procure ; for in such cases as
these, be it hurt, or loss, or danger, or whatever it be, fi-om
which they would be freed, they ought ever to consider and
enquire of the means, whether they be good and lawful, or
no, to be used ; whether it be not against the will and
honour of God, against the rule of Cln-ist^s religion, against
this first commandment, against faith and a good conscience,
and what other good means and remedies there be to help
them, that are appointed of God and prescribed by His
Church.
Of which remedies I shall give you the best. If any man
Jas.5. 13. be afflicted, let him pray, saith St. James ; let him give alms,
let him fast, saith Christ, and though it be the devil that
afflicts him, fasting and prayer will cast him out. If this
means succeeds not, let him submit himself inider the mighty
1 Pet. 5. 6. hand of God, saith St. Peter ; let him bewail his own sins,
that hath justly brought God's punishments upon him ; let
him come hither and learn what God's will and pleasure is ;
let him study to amend his life, to reform his wickedness, to
love, to honoui', to trust in God ; and at last he shall find
that these are the only remedies he can use''. For what great
•• Videte, fratrcs, quia qui in infirmi- foiitcs et arbores et diabolica phylac-
tate ad ecclcsiam cucurrerit, ot corporis teria, per characteres et aruspices et
sanitatein rccipere et peceatorum in- divinos vel sortilegos, miiltiplicia sibi
dulgentiam merebitur ol)tinere. Cum mala niiseri bomincs conantur infcrre ?
ergo duplicia bona possint in ccclesia .... l".t si adbue videtis aliquos aut ad
inveniri, quare per prrecantatores, per fontcs, aut ad arbores, vota reddere, et,
Many jiojmlur superstitions a breach of this law. 151
maivel is it, if when men be blaspliemers of God, take no
cai'c of His service, give themselves over to ungodliness and
profane living, to adultery and fornication, to drunkenness
and excess, to envy and malice, to deceit and cunning, to
fierceness and wrath, to idleness and stealth, to frowardness
and disobedience, (which are the common and usual sins that
run among ye,) what marvel if after all this, besides the
neglect of God's word, the abuse of His Sacraments, many
of you provoke Him to plague you in your corn, and in your
cattle, in your bodies, and in your goods, with divers dis-
eases and sundry kinds of mischief. Therefore, as by the
abuse of God's word and Sacraments (when ye will not be
reformed and grow better by them) the de\dl is permitted
sometimes by himself, and sometimes by his instruments, to
bring griefs and calamities upon you; so by the good and
holy use of them, it will ever be the best way to rid and
remedy yourselves again. But for other fond and wicked
means, whereof we have spoken, let it be accursed for ever,
and sent back to hell, from whence it came.
Now besides this wicked distrust in God, and seeking after
other remedies, there be other vain and silly observations
whereby men also transgress this first commandment, and
forget the power and providence of Him That made it.
Those they be, that by casting of fortunes, by chattering
of birds, by viewing the lines of the hands, and other such
unlawful and superstitious observations, take upon them to
judge of men's acts and lives, and of other things to come ; for
what is this, saith the prophet Isaiah, but to make more gods is. 4i. 23.
than one ; Annunciate nobis quce ventura sunt hi futurum, et
sciemus quia dii estis, ' Take upon you to tell us beforehand,
what things shall come after, and we shall say ye be gods.'
It is God's ofiice to do this, and none of yours.
And though it be common, yet it is a common sin among
the rest of them that are transgressors against this com-
mandment, to be superstitious and fearful, or distrustful of
God, upon fond and idle observations, as at the crossing of the
sicut jam dictum est, sortileges etiam cata increpantes dicite, quia quicunque
et divinos vel praecantatores inqviirere, fecerit hoc malum perdit baptismi sa-
phylacteria etiam diabolica et cliarac- cramentum. S. August. Opp. torn. x.
teres aut herbas vel snccos sibi aut suis 222. edit. Paris. 15.31.
appendere, durissime tanta eorum pec-
15.2 Practical inferences deduced.
S E R M. hare and the stumbling at the threshokl, to turn back and give
— ~ — over their journey. A number of such other vanities there
are, which argue men's fear and distrust in God's providence,
and therefore their contempt and breach of this law, what-
ever they say their forelders have taught them to the con-
trary. For they that trust to then* own fancies, to old and
foolish fables, more than they trust to God and His sayings,
sure I am they are out here at hubebis Me, they have Ilim
not as they should have Him. I might now go on to divina-
tions and astrology, but the stars are too high for your reach.
I will therefore end this matter Avith God's own saying in
ver. 10-12. Deuteronomy at the eighteenth chapter. Let no man ask
counsel of them that use false divinations, or such as give
heed to dreams, and to the chattering of bii'ds ; let there be
no witch among you, nor any that asketh counsel of them
that j)retend to have spuits; for God abhorreth all these
things.
And if there be any among you that are given this way,
God give them grace to repent and amend; for both they
that use it, and they that seek after it, or resort unto it, will
in the end find themselves where they would be full loath to
be found, even in the power of him upon whose power they
depended here. Whereas they that trust not in him here, shall
stand in no fear of him hereafter ; but having God for their
strength, and relying upon His will and providence alone,
according to this His precept, shall at last be satisfied with
the abundance of His mercies and goodness in His eternal
kingdom of glory, which Clixist, the King of glory, grant unto
us ; to Whom, with the Father, &c. &c.
SEliMON XI.
BRANCEPATH, 1633.
Pll/ECEPTUM QUARTUM*.
ExoDts XX. 8.
Memento, ut diem Sahbathi sanctifices, ^-c.
Remember that thou keep holy the Sabbath day, six days shnlt
thou labour^, S^c.
Tins is the fourth commandment; there are three before
it, that took order for the worship of God Himself, and for
the honour of His name ; this takes order for the public form
of His worsliip and the solemnity of His honour ; that it be
not only done, but done at a set time, and upon the days
appointed for it, when nothing else may be done ; and done
in a solemn assembly, and a fidl meeting of the people
together, when they shall do it so much the better.
It is a commandment whereupon God hath bestowed some
cost, urged it more fully, given more reasons for it, spent
more words upon it, than upon any of the rest. And I trow,
this is a sign that His heart is set upon it, that He will never
eudm-e the neglect of it ; and therefore that whatever we do,
we should be sure to remember and regard this as one of His
* Cosin's opinions upon this subject by many, What need is tb.ere of it ?
(which at the time when he WTOte, had and truly the less need the better,
occasioned much discussion) are further But some need it that hear it here
ilkxstrated by a letter from him to Dr. often, and regard it but little ; and I
Collins, dated January 24, 163G, which have heard some say too, Why do we
will be found in its proper place. read so often? that put all the holiness
'' On a leaf before this sermon of the day in hearing of the sermon,
occurs the following passage. ' At the and then Yw auteiri, Domine ; the day
hearing of which text, it may be said is at an end.'
154 Division of the subject.
S E R M. most special commanclmciits ; for which purpose He begins
'- — it with a memento too, so as He doth none of tlie other.
Therefore we divide the commandment into three parts,
(I.) The precept itself, (II.) The illustration of the precept,
(III.) And the reasons annexed and urged for the observance
of it.
(I.) The precept in the first words, memento sanctifices, &c.
'Remember thou keep holy the Sabbath day.' (II.) The
illustration, in the words after, non fades omne opus in eo, 'in
it thou shalt do no manner of work ; thou, and thy son, and
thy daughter,' &c. (HI-) The reasons, in all the rest of the
words; one, because you have six days to do your own
business in; another, because the seventh is none of youi's,
it is the Lord's day ; a third, because God kept it holy Him-
self; and a fourth, because He hath also hallowed it, and
appointed it to be kept holy by all others.
In the precept itself we have three things to consider ; the
memento, the Sabbatum, and the sanctifces. The charge first,
in the word ' remember.' Then the charge of keeping a day
of rest, on the Sabbath, the second word ; and lastly, the
keeping of it as it should be, keeping it holy, ' Remember
thou keep holy the Sabbath day.'
In the illustration we have many things to look into like-
wise ; and in the reasons more ; which I will not specify nor
mention now, lest we lose our labour, and you forget all
before we come at them.
Of the precept itself, and of the parts of it, we will speak
to-day; and that we may speak of tliem to the honour of
Almiglity God, &c.
THE BIDDING OF THE COMMON PRAYERS.
Pater noster.
(I.) 'Remember thou keep,' &c. W e begin vfith the memento,
which word, that the better notice might be taken of it, is
emphatically delivered in the original, and doubled over for
fear it should be forgotten or neglected by any. Recordando
recoi'dere, ' remember ; and while you are remembering, re-
member still,' that is, remember so that at no time it may
slip out of your memory, but that at all times you be careful
Force of the exj)ression ' Remember.' 155
and diligent to keep it ; to keep it in nxiud, that you may the
better observe it in practice.
It is a vehement ejnphonema this^ like that of our Saviour
in the Gospel, ^Let him that heareth hear/ to stir up the Mat. ii.
dulness of the ear, even while it was a-hearing; or like those 4'^,i;.c'Lu'
frequent repetitions in our public service here in the Church, 22. 15.
' Let us pray/ and again praying, let us praj'^, that while we
are at it, Ave be mindful of it, (as many of us are not,) and in
doing of it, we do it indeed ; this is recordando recordare.
A word and an item (as I said) of all the Ten Command-
ments set only at the beginning of this ; as if God had made
His choice, His special choice of this above all the rest, to
put His memento here, Avhich He would have them that have
forgotten it, to call back into their remembrance well; and
they that do remember it, never to forget it again.
Of God^s choice to set it here I will shew you some reasons,
and then proceed to that which follows.
(1.) There is not in all the commandments a duty that
we are more hardly brought unto, than so to attend God's
service, as Avholly to neglect our own for it; no law we
grudge, no commandment that we murmur and repine at so
much as to leave all our own occasions, and come a mile or
twain, or spend a whole day or two in a week to attend His ;
for that this is the duty of this precept, we will prove here-
after. In the meanwhile, we are naturally averse from it,
so given to our own ways, to our profit, to our pleasures or
to our ease, that we are ever ready to neglect, always willing
to forget, what God would have us remember about it. This
is one reason that God hath set His memento upon it.
(2.) Another is, for that this precept is the very life of
all the Decalogue ; by due observance whereof we come both
to learn and to put in practice all the rest of God's command-
ments the better; and without which, in a short time, they
would come all to nothing. For therefore is this time set
apart, that people, among other ends, might meet together
to hear the whole law of God, and by hearing what it is,
learn to observe and do every duty that belongs unto it.
But let it be as the world would have it, sit at home barely
and take your ease ; look to your own, and remember God's
affairs that list ; hear not of the Law and the Prophets, but
156 Necessity for being told to 'remember' it.
s E R M. when ye are at leisure : listen not to the duties of a Christian
XI
'- — above once or twice a quarter^ as the lewd custom among a
ereat many of you is, and see what yom* Christianity will
come to, or what will become of all the duties of the Law, of
all the sermons of the Prophets, and of all the service and
worship of God in a short time. Certain it is, that through
the neglect of this, all the rest of the commandments come
to be neglected too, many duties of them not so much as
known ; and sui'e I am, most of them not so well put in
practice as otherwise we might have hoped they would be.
Remember this therefore, and the benefit of it mil be, that
it will bring all the rest of the commandments into your
remembrance. So the memento set here, which is the life
and the practice of all, is as much as if it had been set upon
them all, upon every commandment by itself. And be this
the second reason.
(3.) Ye shall have a tliird, and so we will leave it. There
was at this time of giving the law throughout the world, a
more general neglect of this commandment than of all the
rest; other things they remembered, this they forgot, and
therefore it was high time to put them in mind of it with a
memento ; they found time for every thing but for the public
and solemn service of God ; every day of the week they took
to be their own, this day and all, and had quite obliterated,
razed out of their hearts, that which the law of nature had
written there from the beginning; that some time of the
revolution, and a full sufficient time too, such as this is, was
to be reserved and set apart for God Himself, not to be
spent in any other service than liis own. Which being now
at the giving of the Law determined to the seventh day, the
Jews kept it after their manner very strictly ; but being
since, at the time of the Gospel, changed to the first day,
and that upon good ground too, (as afterwards ye shall hear,)
in these latter days we observe it as loosely ; insomuch as, if
ever, it is full time now to reneAV and set the memento upon
it again, ' Remember^ that we keep it holy ; for by our doings
we seem, most of us, to have forgotten it full profanely. But
then to see Avhat poor excuses we make for our negligence,
and to think that any answer Mill serve God's turn, this is
worse than forgetfulness, worse than the negligence itself.
Meaning of the ivord Sabbath. 157
' Remember' it tlicrefore to do it, and oljscrve it, as jNIoses
said; and because God bath set His lieart and His stamp
upon it, so to liave it observed and advanced; set not you
your foot upon it, so to bavc it contemned and trodden on.
He hath committed ten matters of great trust unto you,
these ten commandments, and all tlie duties that depend
upon them; and in keeping of them there is great reward. Ps. 19. ii.
He will recompense you largely for your pains ; but above all
the ten, there is one among the rest, this one, which with a
memento doubled over. He recommends to your special regard
and to your principal care. In anywise therefore forget
not, neglect not^ but remember that. And this for the
memento.
II. Follows what we are to remember, Diem Sabbathi,
' Remember to keep tlie Sabbath day.' And a Sabbath day
is nothing else in signification, but a day of rest; always
provided (as ye shall hereafter) that it be no idle rest, but a
rest from common affairs, that holy and sacred actions may
be tlie better attended.
In this sense every festival, lawfully appointed, and made
sacred, is a Sabbath ; and by the moral virtue of this precept,
even from this very word Sabbaihmn, we are bound to keep
them every one. So were the Jews, all the rest of their
feasts (which were called Sabbaths too*^) ; besides their dies
Septimus, the day that is hereafter mentioned. And there-
fore he that translated these words, memento diem Sabbathi .
sanctifices, Remember thou keep holy the feast days, that is,
ever}^ Sabbath or every feast day when it comes, was not so
far out of the way, nor so wide from the true moral meaning
of this commandment, (take it in the very letter,) as some
men, prima facie, took him to have been. St. Gregory Nazi-
anzen, and St. Ambrose may be as well found fault with
withal, as he who hath expressed the commandment in the
plural number, a-d^^ara iravra ^vXaTe^, &c. For if je mark
■^ Oi 'lov^aiov iraffav koprnjv ffclB^aTov koL (TKidivra. Greg. Naz. in Decalogo,
i}u6ixa^ov, avd-Kavais yap to (rdpffaroy. poem. xxxv. Nee sine mysteiio hoc
Tlieoph. in cap. 6. S. Lucie, p. 341. ab Evangclista secundum Matthajum
Additional examples are collected by et ilarcum pure posita puto ; quoniani
Suicer, under SaySySaroy, I. ii. b, and sabbata perpetuffi I'erise sunt resurrec-
Heylyn's History of the Sabbath, part tionis aBternse. S. Ambros. in Evang.
i. chap. 5. § 2. p. 87. edit. 1(J30. S. Lucae, 0pp. i. 1363. edit. Bened.
^ 5a;3/3aTa Trdi/ra (pvXacrcre ^uerapcna
158 What the Sabbath was to the Jews
S E R M. it here, the word is put abstractly and at large, diem Sabbathi,
— - — '■ — not concretely and detcrminateh', diem septimwn, applicable
therefore to any feast day or holy day whatsoever, as well as
to itj though afterwards attributed more eminently to the
seventh day among the Jews, which is here beneath called
ver. 10. ^]jQ Sabbath of the Lord, and to the first day among the
Christians, which we call dies Dominicus too, the feast day of
the Lord, the day of Christ's resurrection ; to these (I say)
more eminently, though not only to these, for there are more
Sabbaths, more feast days than one.
And from hence we fetch the morality of this precept, that
which the law of nature taught every man, even from the
word Sabbathum, that there ai'e days of rest and sanctity to
be kept holy to the Lord^ and that unto what day soever the
Sabbathum is applied, upon any day that a holy rest is law-
fully instituted and appointed, that day, so far as the institu-
tion goes, and so long as the appointment lasts, is to be kept
sacred and holy to God. So the Jews were to keep their
Sabbaths, and we our festivals, every oue according to the
laws and institutions that were made for them by God and
the Church.
For as for the dies sejjtimus here, the seventh day, where-
unto the name of the Sabbath was afterwards given by way
of eminence, we have nothing now to do with it, it expired
with the Jews' synagogue ; and qua talis (as we say) it be-
longed not to the moral law at all ; but this did, that being
then appointed for a Sabbath, as long as the appointment
lasted, it was so to be kept ; otherwise if the very particular
seventh dav had been moral in itself, that is, founded in the
law of nature, it could never have been altered, but we shoidd
have been bound to have kept the Sabbath of the Jews still,
we should have committed a deadly sin if we had not kept
every Saturday holy day during our lives.
But that this was no part of the eternal moral law, and
therefore alterable bv the Church, we have the will of God
Himself (besides other testimonies) declared unto us b}^ His
Col. 2. 16, holy Apostle, ' Let no man condemn you in respect of a
''' Sabbath day or a new moon, which are but shadows of things
to come, but the body is Christ.' Yet for all this, when time
was, the morality of this precept went along Avith their
the festivals of the Church are to us. 159
Sal)])atlis and festivals, as it doth now with ours, with neither
of them as the seventh day, or the first, but with both as set
and solemn times exalted by God and dedicated to His
service ; so that not to have kept the Sabbaths then, had been
sin to the Jews, and not to keep our festivals now will be sin
to us. The one must be kept as well as the other ; I say ' as
well,' for the substance, though not alike for the manner and
circumstance; for the Jews had their ceremonies, and tlie
Christians have theirs, cither peculiar to themselves, where-
with to keep their Sabbaths and holy days ; as after we shall
shew you.
Remember then that you keep the festivals appointed, is a
good paraphrase upon this text, neither can I give you a
better ; for the Jews' Sabbaths are all gone, gone like shadows;
and in sign that they are gone indeed, the very name of a
Sabbath in regard of our festivals is gone away with them too;
for ye shall not read in all the ancient writers for 1500 years
together, that ever any Christians would use that name,
(though in a few late writers, I know not why, it be again
taken up'';) but in place of their Sabbaths, the Apostles and
their successors have instituted Christian festivals, of which the
Lord's day is the chief, succeeding in the room of that which
was also more eminently styled the Jewish Sabbath.
By this time then ye know what ye are to remember^ and
what to understand, by the Sabbath day.
III. Follows the end of remembering it, memento ut sanc-
tifces, remember it to keep it holy. And then we only keep
it holy when we apply it unto holy uses.
For ye must know that God hath dealt with this day, and
other days made holy, as He hath done with men and other
creatures ; sanctifying some of them, and destinating them
to a more reserved and higher use than that which is common.
By nature all men are alike, so are all days ; but yet for all
that^, there be some men separated from the vulgar sort and
exalted above the rest, as magistrates and kings are, as
priests and ministers of God are ; we must not use them at
« Bingh. XX. ii. § 1, and especially are fully exhibited.
Heylyn on the Sabbath, part ii. chap. ^ The remainder of this paragraph
8. § 7, 8, 9, 10, where the revival and is repeated in the next sermon,
progress of these Sabbatarian errors
IGO Illustrations of the holiness of these seasons.
S E R M. GUI' pleasure, as we would use one of our own servants. It
XI
— - — '- — is alike with these days, which ahove all other davs are made
holy to Godj the rest are like our own servants, wc may
employ them about our own affairs ; but these hoi}'' days we
may not be so bold with, they are set apart for holy uses, for
God's service, they are none of ours, nor may they be
employed about our own business. Take another resemblance
that it may affect you the better. The water in baptism, the
bread and wine in the blessed sacrament, naturally they
are no more than other such elements are, but being conse-
crate and set apart once to these holy uses, for which Christ
hath ordained and appointed them, quis eum non lajnclibus
obrueret, saith St. Chrysostom, what punishment should not
he deserve, that would usurp them to common uses and
profane them at his pleasure ? As the water in baptism, as
the bread and Avine in the Eucharist, so is this day consecrate
and set apart b}^ the Church for holy and diA-ine uses.
And what God hath made holy let no man make common,
by applying or spending that time at his pleasui'e which God
hath consecrated and dedicated and marked out for His
service. It is of the nature of every thing which is hallowed,
not to be used as other common things are, (LcAdt. 27. [28,
29.],) every thing separate from the common use must be
Ex. 27. 3. holv to the Lord : not so much but the very fire-forks and
the flesh-hooks, the meanest instruments that belonged unto
the sacrifice, but they were forbidden to be put to any other
Ex. 3 7. 23. use j the very snuffers of the temple not to touch another
lamp, nothing that is sanctified to be profaned, that is, to be
used as other common things are. Tlien this day (and none
so highl}^ exalted by God, so extraordinarily blest and
hallowed above others) in nowise to be accounted as others
are, but to make account of what days soever be ours, besides
these that are dedicated and made holy, are none of ours, are
none of oiu's no more than this temple is ours, are days with
God's mark upon them, must be therefore, as this place is,
accounted and kept holy. And take it for your rule, ye may
as well profane and use this house of God at your pleasure —
make it jouv workshop, make it your barn — as ye may take
the liberty Avhich 3^0 do to profane and use at your pleasure,
these holy daj^s of God ; the sins are both of one nature, and
God must be ivorshipped in public. 101
therefore liath God also joined the duties together, je shall
reverence Mv sanctuary, and observe My Sabbaths. Lev. lo.
This to persuade you that these holy days are to be, and
must of force be kept holy, unless ye will commit sacrilege,
and steal from God that which is His OAvn. Now then to
learn you how they arc to be kept holy, is the next point ;
and all we shall speak unto to-day.
The keeping of these days holy in manner as we ought,
respects both our public and our private duties.
The public first, enjoined and commanded under the name
of convocatio sanda, in the twenty-third chapter of Leviticus
and thii'd verse : ' But in the day of rest^ (that is, as is there
expressed, upon every festival) ' shall be an holy convocation
to the Lord ;' that is, a meeting and a gathering together of
all the people in the public place of God's worship, which is
the chiu'ch, there to do Him open homage and service, and
(as we tell you here, before we begin the service) ' to render
thanks for the great benefits we have received at His hands,
to set forth His most worthy praise, to hear His most holy
word, and to ask those things that are requisite and neces-
sary, as well for the body as the soul.' This is the public duty
of ev' cry day that is made holy.
For a private holiness at home will not serve, will not
satisfj^ this commandment of God. It is a day we are to keep
holy ; let it be kept then as a day, in open view of heaven
and earth ; that, as by day-light, our holiness may be seen
abroad, and let it not be kept as a night, shut up in our
own houses at home, where nobody can see what our holiness
is. The voice of joy and thanksgiving is in the dwellings of
the righteous, saith the prophet David in the himdred and ver. 15.
eighteenth Psalm, when he spake and prophesied of this very
day. And in the dwellings at home (if it be there) truly it
does well, but I fear in many homes there is no such holi-
ness ; but say there were, let us believe them, that they serve
God at home (as they say) when they are not here, yet that
home-servdng would not serve the prophet's turn, not the
service that was done in the very dwellings of the righteous ;
therefore at the nineteenth verse he goes further, Aperite
mihi portas, ' Open me,' saith he, ' the gates of righteousness,'
that is, the church doors, his own house, as holy as it Avas,
COSIN. lyj
1G2 Public worsJdp enjoined by God.
s E R M. would not hold him, hut open the doors of the tahernacle of
— ^^—^ — the temple, thither Avill I so in, and sIicav in the congrega-
Ps. 22. 25- .. .. . .
35. isj &c'. tion, in the great congregation Avill I praise and give thanks
unto the Lord. A congregation, 1 say, and a great one, not
when half the church is empty, hut so great that it may
constituere diem solennem in condensis usque ad cornua Altaris,
Ps. IIS. 27. as in the Psalm he goes on, that the people may stand so
thick in the church, as to fill it up from the entrance of the
door to the very edge of the Altar ; that is, from the very
lowest to the very highest place of the chiux'h. This is that
which God enjoins, convocatio sancta.
For this same home-holiness that is neither seen nor heard,
surely there is some leaven of malignity in it ; and He can no
skill of it, likes it not, will therefore have it come forth, seen
in the countenance, expressed in the view, heard in the voice,
and not in the voice of the pulpit only, to come and hear a
sermon preached, but in the voice of the choir too, of the
whole congregation together, to come and Avith one heart
and one mouth to set foi'tli His most worthy praise.
They shall bring a sacrifice of praise into the house of the
Lord, saith Jeremy, the seventeenth chapter and the twenty-
sixth [verse], speaking of this very thing ; and if they will not,
says he, then will the Lord kindle a fire among the people,
and it shall devour the palaces of Jerusalem, and it shall not
Mai. 2. 3. be quenched ; or, as another of His prophets, ^^rojiciet stercus
solemnitatum vestrarum in fades vestras, He cares not for our
own private keeping of His solemn feasts. He will throw the
dirt of them in our faces. Can ye ofier your sacrifice at
home, in what place you shall choose ? biit ye shall not do
it, saith God Himself in the twelfth chapter of Deuteronomy
and the eighth verse; what shall they do then? at the fifth
[verse] ye shall seek and go to the place which the Lord hath
chosen, to put His name there, and thither shall ye bring
your service, and ye shall rejoice before the Lord your God,
ye, and your sons, and your daughters, and your servants,
and there shall the Lord bless you. This is a plain place,
applied by an ancient and a holy council, the council of
Gaugres, which was afterwards confirmed by an universal
council, to the keeping of the Lord's day and other festivals
among the Christians; and therefore the}' made a law
Benefits residlhiy from it. 103
against them that presumed of tlieir own heads to keep it
otherwise. The law is worth tlie repeating. Domos Dei
honoramus, et conventus, qui in his fiunt, tanquam sanctos et
utiles suscipimus, pietatem in p7'ivatis domibus non claudentes,
sed omnem locum in nomine Dei (sdificatum honoramus, et con-
gregationem sanctum in eadem ecclesia [factum'] pro utiUtate
communi rec/pimus^. 'We honour tlie house of God^ and tlie
holy assembly there gathered in His name. We sliut not up
our holiness in our own houses^ hut we bring it forth into
tlie place that the Lord hath chosen to let His name dwell
there.' And in the end they doubt not to lay an anathema,
a grievous censure, upon any that being able to come forth
shall neglect the church and keep his own house that day,
though he thinks himself never so well employed. And ye
shall see the reason of this public assembling together, to set
forth the service of God.
(1.) God shall have the more honour by it, more by a full
congregation than by a few. The honour of a king is in the
midtitude of his subjects ; when half the church is empty, as
much as in us lays we rob God of half His honour ; but if
He be not duly honoured by anj of us here, lie will never be
beholden to us for His honour ; for whether we will or no,
He will be honoured by us another way ; either here, in our
willing service; or elsewhere, in oiu* unwilling punishment
for neglect of that service : one of the two be we siu'e, and
choose we whether.
(2.) It makes more for the good of the Church; the
prayers are the stronger for it, they are carried up the
higher, they pierce the clouds when they are sent up with a
full cry of all the people together; whereas they languish,
like the congregation itself, when they want half their com-
pany to help them.
(3.) Every private Christian is the better for it ; he does
his service with more cheerfulness when he has all his com-
panions and fellow-servants to join with him in it; the worse
' The Latin version here followed $eiav ev rols Olkois, aWa iravra t6ttov
is that of Dionj'sius Exiguus. The rhv eV ovofxan tov 06oD olKo'Sop.rtdiVTo.
original text is this .... tovs oikovs ri/jLwvTfs, koI tt]v iv alnfj ttj iKKkrjcna
TOV 0SoS TlfJ.ZfJ.iV, KCU TCS CTVvSBovS TOS TOV ©eoC CTVVU^OV KOlVr]V, 6tS 0}(p€AetaV
iir' avrols, ojs aylas Kal eKoxpeXeTs arro- tov koivov, diroSexi^^eOa, .... can. xxi.
Sexf^/tteOa, ov ffvjKMiovTis T7)f euce- Lahb. Cone. ii. 424'.
M 2
164 Men prolific in excuses
S E R ?.I. a great deal if he wants them : dull and lica\"V' at his yvoxk,
XT • • *
— ever ready to sleep, besides the e\dl example that he takes
to be as negligent as he sees others be, and otherwhiles also
to take the same liberty, and tarry away himself; which toy
takes a many, I fear it will take them all together at once,
one time or other, (as many holy days it does,) and so we
shall have a goodly solemnity to celebrate God's festivals.
Though truly to the infirm there must be some indulgence ;
but we are somewhat afraid for all that to open this door ; for
as soon as we do but open it for the infirm and weak, Avlicn
they are out, there comes such a press of people after them
that we know not how to get it slivit again ; for then avc are
all weak, all ill, and so all run through. The truth is, all
are ill disposed, or else they would never make such poor
pretences as they usually do. The rawness of the weather,
the hardness of the way, the length of the journey, the least
indisposition of the body, are with most of you now thought
to be reasons sufficient enough to affront this law and com-
mandment of God; and yet youi* own affairs, your own
pleasures and customs, they shall not affront. The day be-
fore was a day for your market ; perhaps the Aveather worse,
the journey longer, yet that you could bear. This day is a
market for your souls, and this place, hither you cannot
come, could not, no by no means ; you had endangered your
health, and yet you would venture it for a less matter by far.
So comes God^s church. His market-place, to be the emptiest
always of the two, to the shame of your pretended religion.
Indeed he said well, if the people will not come, satis wins,
satis nullus, let the priest serve God by himself, rather
than God should have no sersice done Him at all; the
brooks must run on in their channels whether the beasts vnW
come and drink of them or no ; and God must have His
honour done Him, whether the people be pleased to assist at
it or not. ' Well if one,^ says the heathen man ; but better a
great deal if many, if all the peoiile come together.
(1.) Better for the reasons we have given already, and for
these besides. In regard of the Chm-ch^s uniformity, that
they may all be known to be of one and the same mind, of
one and the same religion, that they keep one profession of
their faith ; and therefore it is said of the veiy first Christians
for absenting themselves from church. 1G5
of all, as a true note of their holiness and rehgion, that they
were all together with one accord in one place. ^'^ts 2. l.
(2.) Then in regard of the commonwealth, whose blessing
it is when God maketli men to be of one mind in this house ;
Avhose strength and stay it is, when God is dulv honoured,
as well as when the king is duly served and obeyed by all the
people together.
(3.) And lastly, in regard of each private man ; that here,
hence, as from a store-house, he ma}' fetch food for his soid,
from the nundince sacrce he may fetch commeatum animie, give
praise and honour and obedience unto God, "Who, in ex-
change, will give him knowledge to enlighten his under-
standing, and grace to reform his will, and assistance in
plenty to resist the temptations of this wicked world. Which
He grant unto us for His mercy's sake, for I cannot now, the
time will not suffer me, to go any further. To God, &c., &c.
SERMON XII.
XII
Exodus xx. 9, 10.
Sex dies operabis et fades omnia opera tua.
Sepiimo autem die Sabbatum Domini Dei tui est; non fades
omne opus in eo.
Six days shalt thou labour and do all that thou hast to do.
Bat the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God ; in
it thou shalt do no manner of work.
s E R M. In the words before we had the precept itself, where we
had three things to consider; the memento, the sabbathum,
and the sanctifices; the charge first, in the word 'remember/
then the charge of keeping that day of rest, in the word
'sabbath/ under which were comprehended all other days
solemnly set apart and appointed for God's service; and lastly,
the charge of keeping both it and them as they should be
kept, in the word ' holy/ ' Remember that thou keep holy
the Sabbath day/ And so far are Ave gone.
In these words that follow we have both the illustration of
the precept, and the reasons that are given for the due
observance of it. The illustration, in non fades omne opus in
eo, tu et filius tuns, t^c. 'In it thou shalt do no manner of
work, thou, and thy son, and thy daughter,' &c. ; the reasons,
in sex diebus operaberis, because you have six days for your-
selves; and in septimo die sabbathumDomini,heca.use theseventh
is none of yours, but a day hallowed and set apart for the
public and solemn semce of God; therefore so to be kept
by you, and not to be spent upon your own affairs,
INIore strictly we have in these Avords a double permission,
and a double opposition. The double permission, (1.) 'six
Division of ifie subject. 1C7
days slialt thou labour/ (2.) iu tliem tlioii slialt do all thy
work; and the double opposition, (1.) 'the seventh day is the
Lord's/ (2.) ' in it thou shalt do no work/
Both which how tliev are to be understood, we shall bv and
by enquire; if first, I have put you iu mind to call with me
upon God the Father, &c.
THE BIDDING OF THE COMMON PUAVERS.
Pater Noster, S^c.
' Six days shalt thou labour and do all that thou hast to
do,' Avhich words are put here pei^inissive, by way of indul-
gence and permission, to shew the great equity of the precept,
that men being so liberally dealt withal, and suffered to
have six days at home to themselves, they might have no
excuse if they did not willingly and cheerfully come forth to
serve God upon the seventh.
For if God would have used His own absolute authority
and dominion over us, He might have set us, and justly re-
quii-ed it of us, to serve Him all the seven days together, left
us never a day for ourselves; or He might have taken to
Himself six days of the week, and given us but one. And
who could have said Cur itafacis?
This out of His sovereignty and greatness He might have
done, and we could have found no fault with it neither ; but
since that out of His bounty and goodness He would not do
it, what excuse can we find, or what strange injustice and
wretched unthankfulness will it be in us, if, after so many
days aftbrded us, we grudge to let him liave the seventh, that
one day that He hath reserved to Himself !
It is here as it is with your tithes; nine parts have to
yourselves, the tenth is God's own. Indeed all was His, to
have disposed of as He pleased, but this was His bounty to
give you nine times as much as Himself; and he is either a
wretch', or somewhat worse, that will grudge or defraud God 'a niggard
of one in ten, deserves to have the nine taken away, and but
the tenth left. Or it is as it was with Adam in Paradise, to
whom God gave to eat of all the trees in the garden save one, Gen. 2. 16.
kept but one from him among them all; whereas God might
have kept all the rest to Himself, and given him but one.
168 Men tempted to spoil God of His own.
S E R M. but this was Ilis bounty; in that to Adam, iu this to us,
— - — ^ — reserves only one in ten in our tithes, one of seven in our
time, to be bestowed upon His service.
Now in either of these if w^e afford Him not His own, it is
turned with us from Adam's case to the devil's, who is ever
and anon suggesting to us, as he did to him, that we should
Gun. 3. 1. make no scruple of it, but take all to ourselves, go and eat
of the forbidden tree and all ; for believe it, God's portion,
be it in His tithes, or be it in His times, both being holy to
Him, they are as the forbidden tree in God's garden, men
arc not to meddle with them, nor convert them to their own
uses ; if tliej^ do, though the fruit be never so fair to look on
at first, it will either choke them or poison them in the end.
And though it be their own wives that came and persuaded
them to it, (as such wives there be left still in the world,) yet
let them assure themselves, they will find at last, (as Adam
did at first,) it w^as but the very devil himself in their wives'
likeness.
Let the tithes go, and apply it to this precept, to these
■words we have in hand. A man has had six days in the
week to himself, for his labour, for his profit, for his pleasure,
for any of his OAvn affairs. The seventh comes, the holy day
comes, dies quern fecit Dominus, the day that the Lord hath
made for Himself, the Lord's day comes; and then comes me
the devil in the likeness of a rainy day, or in the shape of cold
weather, or in the likeness of some business or other that is
to be done, and tells him that God must let him have that
day also, as well as the other six, or else all will go -oTong
with him. And what if it be forbidden by God's law ? ye
shall have one devil meet with him and say, '■ Come, it is for
your own advantage, you are a free-born man, and the law
does but scare you. Take time while we have it ; you may
do what you list.' And what if it be forbidden by the
Church ? Ye shall have another devil stand by and tell him,
' What need have care for the Church ? let the Church care
for itself, it will have but one the less for thee ; and for this
time she shall pardon us.'
Thus we dispossess God of His right, and thrust Him from
His freehold, while we have any list to take a fi-eedom to
ourselves. But believe it, this dav of the Lord's is a day
Pojmlar arguments against holy days. 1G9
hallowed and set apart from tlic other days; is a day for-
bidden lis to use, or meddle a\ itlial, or spend any other\visc
than He hath appointed. Therefore believe it also, that the
best advice is, when any such suggestion comes, (come it by
whom it will come, by Eve or the devil,) to give it that
answer that Joseph gave to Potiphar's wife, ' Behold, all that Gen. 39.
is Avithin the house, he hath left in my power, only thee ^' ^"
excepted, and how then should I injure him in this one?^ In
like manner six days hath God given us to ourselves, reserved
but one for some public and solemn honour and worship to
be done Him every week, and how then should wc deceive
Him in this one, seeing by His goodness and liberality all
the rest arc ours? This were a good answer, and it is but
just and meet it should be so ; for you see the great equity
of the precept, and the great indulgence shewed to us in it,
that of seven parts of our time, we have six for our own occa-
sions. We will conclude therefore with one of the Hebrew
doctors upon this text, cum omnibus diebus septvmana homo
sese occupet in negotiis suis necessaTiis, hoc die maxime con-
sentaneum est, ut se segreget ac quiescet projjter Dei gloriam,
' It is most fit we should give God this day of the week for
His service only, when Ave have all the rest for our own
necessary aflairs.^
' Six days slialt thou labour, but the seventh day.' Nay,
but now I think on it, before we can come to that day there
comes one that bids us make a stay yet at these six, one and
a thousand too, nos numeri sumus, a great company of them, Mark ;;. 9.
as they said of themselves, that put the question home to us
and demand of u.s full stoutly, what authority the Church
hath to make any of these six days a holy day, or to restrain
meu from the liberty which God hath here given them, of
bestowing six whole days of the week in labour, if they Avill ?
It is not, they say, in the po^ver of the Church to command
any days to be kept holy, Avherein men shall be required to
cease from their common and daily vocations. And for proof
hereof, they desire to take this fourth commandment, aud no
other interpretation of it than that which we have alloAved of
ourselves ; Avhich is, that God licenseth and leaveth it at the
liberty of every man to Avork six daA^s in the Aveek, so that he
rest the seventh. Seeing therefore, that God hath left it to
170 TJie Church has power to decree
S E R i\r. all men's liberty, that if they think good they might labour
• — - — '— six days, they say that neither the power of the Church, nor
any power inider heaven, can take away this liberty from
them, which nevertheless, by appointing so many holy days
to be kept as are among tis, is frequently done. Nay, if it
be lawful, they say, to abridge men's liberty in this point,
and where God says here, 'six days thou mayest labour, if
thou wilt,' the Church shall say, 'thou shalt not labour six
days,' they see no reason why the Church may not as well
command and say, ' thou shalt work upon the seventh day,'
though God says upon it thou shalt do no work at all.
But if they can see no reason to the contrary of this, I
dare say it is long of their evil eyes ; as likewise that which
they add, that they see not but if the Church may restrain the
liberty which God hath given men, it may as well take away
the yoke w^hich God hath put upon them. And their con-
clusion is, that there is no power on earth that can take away
this liberty.
Which assertion (though here applied no further than to
this present case) extended once to many, wall not only shake
the universal fabric of all government and authority, but
instantly open a gap, nay set open the flood-gates to all con-
fusion and anarchy. For whereas God Himself hath defined
things of greatest weight (such as this seventh day is,) and
left all sorts of men in the rest to be guided either by their
own discretion, if they be free from subjection to others, or
else to be ordered and commanded by the laws of their
superiors, under whom they live ; these pleaders for freedom
and pati'ons of liberty, w^ould have it proclaimed to the world,
that all such laws and commandments are void, which are
made of things neither exacted nor prohibited by the law of
God. Whereas indeed the very contrary assertion is certainly
true ; and avc must either maintain that those things which
the law of God leaveth at liberty are all subject to the posi-
tive laws and precepts of our government, or else we must
overthrow the world and make every man his own com-
mander.
Seeing then that labour is left free, and rest is left free
upon any one day of these six by this law of God, how come
they, or how can thoy exempt tliom from the power of
iw matters left indifftrent. 171
liuraan laws, unless tlic world has no power to make any law
at all ?
I will i3ut one question to them, and it shall be but one ;
the other holv days and feasts of the Jews, besides their
Sabbath day, the feast of Tabernacles, of the Dedication, of
Lots, were they not all allowed and approved by God? Had
they not all and every one offended, that had refused to keep
and observe them ? and yet were they not an abridgment of
the people^s liberty in using all these six days of the week at
their pleasure ? There is no question but they were ; and
there is no answer to be given to these things.
For doth our Church in these things any otherwise than
God and Ilis holy saints have done before her ? I conclude
with the style of the councils'*, Sequentes iyitur et nos per
omnia sanctorum vestiyia. Herein we do but tread in the
steps of our holy fathers, and follow them that were followers
therein of God Himself. And now I come to that which
follows here in the text.
II. ' But the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord ; in
it thou shalt do no manner of work, thou, nor thy son, nor
thy daughter, thy manservant, nor thy maidservant, nor thy
cattle, nor the stranger that is Avithin thy gates.'
Where Avhat the seventh day was, and why it was called
the Sabbath, I have told you before ; shewing you Avhat was
moral and for ever to endure, and what was circumstantial,
or alterable, in them both ; that sabbaths, or days of rest to
be kept holy to God, are of the moral law, and founded in
nature ; that one of seven is commanded of God in Scriptui-e
perpetually to be observed ; that this one, as long as the Jews'
synagogue lasted, was to be the seventh; that both it, and
the manner of keeping it, being figures of things to come,
were buried with Christ in His grave. Upon Whose resur-
rection^ that there arose the beginning of a new day, Avhich
now we call the Lord's day, to remain for ever^ and not to be
altered. Wherein though INIr. CaMn and some other new
writers dissent from us, (who say that neither one day of
seven, nor yet that this day of the Lord, is so commanded or
established but that it is still alterable bv the Church, so that
" See Binii Cone, vol. v. pp. 4-28— 430.
1 72 The holiness of the Lord's day whence derived.
S E II ]\i. anv other day may be kept as well as it*",) vet I verily believe
'- — that both Scripture and Fathers are herein more plain for
ours than for theirs, or for any other opinion whatsoever.
But herein "we agree <=, that qua talis, the seventh day and
the Sabbath belonged not to the moral law, that therefore
both the nature and the name of the Sabbath is gone,
and was not so much as used among Christians for 1560
years together, till now of late that some^^ men began to ex-
pound this commandment somcAvhat like Jews, not being
content Avith the substance of it neither, but stretching out
the very cii'cumstances also, (many of them,) to a perpetual
necessity and duty for ever. Which, "why they do, and to
w'hat end they do it, (making almost a schism about it too,
in many places,) I cannot tell. But this I know, letting
them pass, I know what we are to do ; that herein, as be-
cometh those who follow Avith all humility the ways of God
and of peace, we are to honour, reverence, and obey, in the
very next degree unto God, the voice of the Church of God
Avherein Ave live.
And according unto the sound of that A'oice, which I have
heard and listened to afore from the first, I shall now speak
to you of this commandment like a Christian, and not like a
JcAV ; that is, I shall neglect the Sabbath, Avith Avliich Ave
haA'e nothing to do iioaa', and set forth the rehgion of the
Lord's day, dies Dominicus, as all our books call it ; Avliich all
men are bound for ever with all holiness to observe.
Where first, Ave saA^ that this daA% in itself, is no more than
any other days of the Aveek be ; all the days of the year, qua
tales, are alike, and not one better or more holy than another.
AAlience then is the difference ?
Ye are to know that God hath dealt Avith days as Avith
men. By nature all men whatsoever are alike; so are all
days. There "^ be some men separated from the vidgar sort
and exalted above the rest, as magistrates and kings are, as
•^ See Ileylyii's History of the Sab- work u])Oii the Sabbath appeared first
bath, part ii. chap. (J. § 7. p. 460. edit. in 1595, and again in l(iOG. See some
1681. extracts from it in the treatise of
= See Heylyn, part ii. chap. G. § 6. Heylyn, part ii. cliap. 6. § 7.
p. 4G5. e The whole of this paragraph is
'' The chief propagator of these here repeated from the last sermon;
opinions was one JJr. Bound, whose see p. 150.
One among the things set apart to holy uses. 173
priests and ministers of God are ; we must not use tliem at
our pleasure, as we would use one of our own servants. It
is alike with these days, whieh above all other days arc
made holy to God ; the rest are like our own servants, we
may employ them about our omu aflairs ; but these holy days
we may not be so bold with, they are set apart for holy uses,
for God's scr-sdce, they arc none of ours, nor may they be
employed about our own business. Take another resem-
blance, that it may affect you the better. The water in
Baptism, the bread and wine in the blessed Sacrament,
naturally they are no more than other such elements are :
but being consecrate and set apart once to these holy uses,
for which Christ hath ordained and appointed them, quis eum
non lap'idibus obrueret, saith St. Chrysostom, Avhat punish-
ment should not he deserve, that would usurp them to
common uses, and profane them at his pleasure? As the
water in Baptism, as the bread and wine in the Eucharist, so
is this day consecrate and set apart by the Church, for holy
and diAine uses. And what reasons the Church had so to
do, and to honour this day above others, I shall now shew
you.
AVe commonly call it Sunday, the name that our fore-
fathers gave it before they heard of Christ. For this cause
we keep it not; it was the superstition of the pagans to
institute it to the sun, and in that respect to esteem it better
than all other days whatsoever. But this is the reason we
keep it, and I will tell it you in St.Austin^s words ^: quia hie
dies per multa, eaque insignia et preestantissima Dei opera,
declaratus est sanctus et venerabilis, 'because this day hath
been made honourable and glorious, by the great and mighty
works of God that hath been done upon it ;' so that when
the day comes, we do not so much observe the day itself, but
f Domiiilciim ergo diem Apostoli et mus in ilia. Nam sicut ipse Dominus
apostolici viri itleo religiosa solemiitate Jesus Christus et Salvator resurrexit a
habendum sanxerunt, quia in eodem mortuis, ita et nos resurrecturos in
Redemptornostrse a mortuis resurrexit ; novissimo die speramus Ac
quique ideo Dominicus appellatur, ut ideo sancti doctores Ecclesiae decreve-
in eo a terrenis operibus vel mundi runt onmem gloriam Judaici Sabba-
illecebris abstinentes tantuin divinis tismi in illam transferre ; ut quod ipsi
cultibus serviamus, dantes scilicet diei in figura, nos celebravemus in veritate.
huic honorem et reverentiam propter S. August. Opp. torn. x. fol. 238. edit,
spem resurrectionis nostrae, quam habe- Paris. 1531.
] 7-i Great ivorks accomplished on this day,
S E R M. we bring into onr minds the miglity works tliat God hath
^^^' wrought upon the day ; for Avhich works of His we are bound
to worship Him as often as Ave renew the memory of them,
and Ave are bound to renew the memory of them as often as
the time returns; lest otherwise we should Avholly forget
them.
Therefore hath the Church of God with great A-eneration
always observed this day, and so religiously above others,
that to this only it seemed good to the Holy Ghost and
to them, to give it the name of dies Domini, 'the Lord's
day.'
And what those works now be, Avherewith it liath pleased
God to magnify this day above the rest, and to set forth both
His glorj^ and His goodness to us, ye shall hear from
St. Austin, as he had it from Theophilus, the president of a
council in Palestine, Venerabilis est hie dies (says he) qui
Dominicus appeUatur, et dies p)rimus^, 6fC.
' This is a venerable day which we call the Lord's day, and
the first day of the Aveek, wliich indeed was the very first day
of the world, and a day exalted by God's goodness, and
Avonders wrought upon it, far aboA^e any other day whatso-
ever. In it Avas the light created, which made the evening
and the morning the first daA" ; in it were the people of God
delivered and set free from the bondage of Pharaoh ; in it
God rained doAvn manna in the Avilderuess ; in it was Christ
born, Avas circumcised, was worshipped by the Gentiles, was
baptized in Jordan; in it He did His first miracle and mani-
fested forth His glory; in it He went in triumph towards
His passion; and Avhen they had slain Him and laid Him
in His grave, upon it He rose again in greater triumph from
the dead. Afterwards upon this day He appeared to His
disciples, and upon this very day sent His Hoi}' Spirit upon
them all. ITpon Avhich day also we look for His appearance
g Dominicum ergo diem Apostoli et creati sunt angeli, in ipso quoque a
apostolici viri ideo religiosa soUennitate mortuis resurrexit Cliristus, in ipso de
habendum sanxerunt, quia in eodem coelis Spiritus Sanctus super Apostolos
Redemptor noster a mortuis resurrexit, descendit, manna in eodem eremo pri-
quique ergo Dominicus a])pc!latur [see mum de eoelo datum est. His enim
last note] Aj)paret autem liuuc etiam in speciebus ac talibus indiciis Dominica
scripturis Sanctis esse solennem. Ipse dies extat insignis. S. August. Opp.
enim est primus dies seculi, in ipso torn. x. fol. 238 b. edit. 15;il.
formata sunt elemcntn mundi, in ipso
// is commemorative of our Lord's resurrection. 175
again when He shall come to judgment, and raise us up, all
that have served Him truly, to eternal life.'
These are all the words of St. Austin, all \yliich, except
that of the day of judgment, (which no man can tell,) arc
either expressly verified by the history', or generally delivered
to he true by the consent of the Church in all ages before
him.
But among them all, the chief and most singular is that
niiirhtv and glorious Avork of Christ in His resurrection from
the grave, by which, et mors interitum et vita accepit initium,
saith Leo; 'both death had an end, and life a new be-
ginning.' And this is it which more solemnly the Church
of God observeth ever}' year upon the feast of Easter, the
feast of Christ's resurrection ; renewing it every week upon
this day, if not Avith so great solemnity, yet with due honour
and religion that becometh Christians, Avho live and die in
hope also of a resurrection to a better life.
So have we the reasons of observing this day above all
others, and of the Church's transferring the honour of the
old Jewish Sabbath upon it ; that as the one did continually
bring to mind the former world finished by creation, so the
other might keep us in perpetual remembrance of a far better
world begun by Christ, That came to restore all things, and
to make heaven and earth anew again.
To which if ye add the many figures that this day had
in the Old Testament, and therefore (as St. Cyprian^ and
St. Austin' argue) must of necessity be kept in the New;
and then the keeping of it, de facto, by the Apostles them-
selves, in the twentieth chapter of St. John, in the second
chapter of the Acts, in the twentieth chapter of the Acts, in
the first Epistle to the Corinthians and the sixteenth chapter,
and the first chapter of the Revelations ; besides the manifest
and express places of Scripture, both in the Old and New
Testament, that the Sabbath was to cease ; then have ye all
the reasons and causes why the Church of God, with great
consent in all ages, hath thought itself bound to observe and
honour this day ; and not the day so much, as upon the day
^ This argument is carried out at See etlit. Baluz. cxlv, cxlvi.
considerable length, with many illus- ' See the passage from St. Augustine
trations, in the treatise De Sancto Spi- already quoted,
ritu, formerly ascribed to St. Cyprian.
176 Manner in ivldch it should be kept.
s E R ivr. to serve and lionour God Who hath done so great things for
— • us as ye have heard.
III. From the causes then of observing the day I come to
the rules and manner how it shouhl be observed ; that is, how
it hath l)cen heretofore, and how it ought to be kept still; with
what religion and strictness, with what devotion and gladness
we are to celebrate this day of the Lord. Wherein I shall
not meddle, I sliall tell you beforehand, with the Jews'
observances of their Sabbath, being for the most part shadows
of things to come, and no ways pertaining to us further than
the general rules of religion and moral duties will carry them.
But I shall only shew you the laws and customs of our fore-
fathers in the faith, by which they kept this day religiously
from the beginning of the Chui'ch.
And of this there be many things defined in councils with
great wisdom and sanctity, set forth in the Fathers and
Doctors of the Church with great piety and devotion ; all
which, notwithstanding, may be reduced to two heads ; to
those things which are commanded, and to those things
which are forbidden to be done upon this day. Of both
which because the themes are large, and more to be said of
either than can be said now, I shall, by God's grace, speak
the next time. To God, &c.
SERMON XTTT.
Exodus xx. 10.
But the seventh clay is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God : in it
thou shalt do no manner of work, thou and thy son, and thy
daughter, thy man servant and thy maid servant, thy cattle,
and the stranger that is ivithin thy gates, ^c.
You liacl the precept before that God's clay was to be kept
holy; and the reasons of the precept, why and for what cause
it was so to be kept. In these words you have the illustra-
tion of it, how and after what manner it is to be kept;
wherein what I promised before, I come now to set forth ;
and I shall shew you, as a true pattern for you to follow,
what the laws and customs of the old Christians, our fore-
fathers in the faith, have been concerning the religious
observance of this day, and other such like, in the Church of
God.
Of which divers things are recorded, not only by the
ancient Fathers in their own writings, but by synods and
councils likewise in the writings and laws of the whole
Church ; which being at the first but merely ecclesiastical,
saving the foundation they had in reason and Scripture,
were afterwards confirmed and strengthened by the imperial
and secular laws of the state ; that so, one way or other, or by
all ways together, all men might be brought to the due
observance, and holy keeping, of these days of God.
I reduce all to two heads ; those things wliich upon such
days are commanded, and those things which upon such days
are forbidden to be done; by which, as by a corollary, we
shall also see what is permitted to be done, and not so strictly
prohibited as some surmise.
COSIN. jj
178 Division of the subject.
s E R M. The things commanded I distribute into four heads^ and
— '- :— tliey are the foui' properties of all solemn festivals whatso-
ever, sanctity, rest, joyfuluess, and lil^erality ; and the things
forbidden into as many as be opposite to these, that is to
say, profaneness, unnecessary labour, fasting and other signs
of sorrow, sordid sparing, and other enemies of bounty and
charity. Out of all which, the things that are permitted will
result of themselves.
Now of these that we mav, &c.
THE BIDDING OF THE COMMON PRAYERS,
Pate}' Noster, ^c.
There is a certain observation of days and times which
is impious, and tlierefore unla^vful and forbidden; another
there is which is natural and useful, and therefore permitted;
a third whicli is religious and solemn, and therefore com-
manded. Of these three Ave are to set forth the last.
The impious and unlaAvful observing of days, is that which
the laws of God and man have condemned, in Avizards, and
soothsayers, and in other superstitious and fond people, that
have their good days and their t\i\ days to observe by them-
selves ; that tell us such a day is dismal, and such a time
unlucky, I know not upon what fables and signs which con-
ceit and folly hath taught them ; attributing those things to
fate, and fortune, and to the signs of heaven, with other such
vanities, Avhich belong properly to the a^ isdom and providence
of God. And this is the obserA-ance of days and times, which
Gal, 4. 10. St. Paul reprehended in the Galatians.
The laAvful observance of days is that Avhich neitlicr regards
the signs of heaven, to divine by them, nor the vain super-
stitions and fond conceits of men, to be ruled or awed by
tliem ; but observeth only the natural course and change of
this inferior air, whereby the days and times and seasons
vary so often, that of necessity regard must be had, and
observance must be made, of some days more than others,
of all in their divers seasons, for the despatch of common
and daily affairs.
The last, Avhich is enjoined and commanded, as it con-
demns the first, so it pertains not to the second, and indeed
I The Lord's day intended to be a continual memorial. 1 79
; is not so raucb jiu observance of the days themselves, as of
I some memorable thing that fell out and was done upon those
I days ; the memory of any work, by the return and observance
' of that day whereon it was wrought, being always best and
. most securely preserved.
So the Jews were commanded to observe the feast of the
! Passover, the fom-teenth day of the first month, let the posi- Ex. 12. C.
tion of the stars, or the face of the sky, or other observances
{. be that day what they would ; because that veiy day God
smote the Egyptians, and passed over the houses of thever. is.
Israelites; and again, enjoined to keep every seventh day
of the Aveek a Sabbath, as by this commandment; not
that the Sabbath day differed any whit in natui'e from
another day, but for that upon it God rested from His
creation of the universe. As they the seventh, so we that
are Christians the first, in memory of Christ's resurrection,
. and many other glorious and great works that were wrought
j by Him upon if*; which therefore, by way of a singular pre-
' rogative given to it above all others, w^e style, and usually
call the Lord^s day.
And this is that which St. Austin'' says, we halloAV the
memory of God's benefits to His Chui'ch, with solemn feasts
' and set days ; lest otherwise, through negligence and ingrati-
tude we should wholly forget what great things He hath at
i those times done for us.
Now why God should choose this first day of the week,
Avhich we call the Lord's day, rather than another, wherein
to shew forth such manifest signs of His power and goodness
to us, it were a question vain and infinite ; vain, for that no
other reason can be given but His will and pleasure only,
whereinto we are not to search ; infinite, for that the self-same
question would still remain, if God for that purpose had
chosen any other day besides.
But this is the day which the Lord hath made, and made
it so glorious and so venerable that thereupon the Church,
hatb transferred all the glory of the other day, which was the
old Sabbath of the Jews. The Sabbath then is gone, and
the Lord's day is come in place of it, to be received obedi-
ently as the other, and to be observed too, religiously as the
^ See the previous sermon, p. 174. " See p. 173, note f.
N 2
180 TJie observation of sacred seasons
S E R M. otlicr, though not with the same ceremonies^ yet with the
_i^^^L same substance that the other was.
And all this, by virtue not of any human constitution, but
of the very moral law of God, whereunto we stand all bound;
for suppose this Sabbath of the Jews gone, as it must be
supposed, yet I trow that this will be granted me, that Christ
hath left a power to His Chui'ch, the same that God left
with Moses in the mount, for the tabernacle, to make and
Heb. 8. 5. appoint another day according to the pattern of the first.
That pattern was the life of this commandment ; and the
life and moral vigour of this commandment is, to have some
days set apart for holy uses, and for the outward and public
service of God. This is in nature, and in the moral law ;
which, if it were not written here, is written in every man's
heart.
That such days then there must be, is moral. And this is
moral, that all things in the ser\ice of God must be done in
order, not that every body should appoint a day by himself;
and this is moral too, that obedience must he. given to
superiors in those things wherein they are superiors. And
therefore this also must needs be moral, that the observing
of the seventh day then determined by God before for the
Jews was moral to them, and that hkewise the obsernng of
the first day now, determined, if not by Christ and His
Apostles, yet by our superiors, we are sure our lawful
superiors in the universal Church of Christ, to whom we
owe obedience, must be moral to us.
Therefore it was to the Jews as well moral to observe other
certain days, which God and their superiors had determined,
as to observe the seventh, or any day at all; for thc}^ were
all called Sabbaths, though the seventh was more eminently
styled so than the rest. And it is as well moral to us, to
observe other days, which the Church and our superiors have
commanded to be kept holy, as to observe this first ; for they
be all called holy days, though this Lord^s day, by a special
prerogative that it hath in Christ's resurrection, be more
eminently styled so than the rest. And the reason is un-
answerable, because by tliis or that limitation of a day, there
is no morality infused or brought upon the day itself, but a
former morality only awakened and revived, which consisteth
is apart of the moral law. 181
in a due obedience to God, and to the order of His Church,
which is our superior in these cases.
This oliedicuce we are sure is moral, and this order per-
petual ; the order that is now, and ever hath been estabhshcd
since Christ's time, for tlie observance of this day; neither
can we see any reason why it shouhl, or why it can be
possible ever to alter it again, unless men can bring Christ
out of heaven into His grave again, and prevail with Him to
rise from it upon some other day, since the day itself is
founded, and, as St. Austin speaks, hallowed and made
sacred, by the day of Christ's'' resm-rection, which was the
first day of the week, the day that we now observe.
Wherefore we must needs depart from that error, which
some heretics of old began, and some of late have endeavoured
to re\ive, that because the old Sabbath is called yjacfwm sem- Ex.31. 13.
piternum, therefore we are bound to keep it still, the Saturday
for the Sunday, or the Sunday for it, or the one at least as
weU as the other. For to that objection oi pactum sempnter-
num,, any of St. Austin's answers will serve, either that it is
called everlasting because it signified an everlasting rest, or
else because it bound the Jews everlastingly, that is, as long
as their religion stood, and might not be intermitted, as some
other ceremonies of theirs were.
But their Sabbaths bind not us, neither one nor other, we
depart from them that think so. And so we do from them
who think we are bound to no festival days at all, or at least
to none but one, which they call the Sabbath, and we, more
properly, the Lord's day ; seeing the command of our lawful
superiors is upon us far more, to which we owe obedience, as
we have said, even by the moral law.
And now I come from keeping these days, to the manner
and due order of keeping them aright, according to the laws
of God and His Church. Wherein, though I would have my
discourse chiefly and primarily referred to the Lord's day,
yet I would not have other holy days excluded, that are
appointed by the Church, and by the laws of the kingdom
besides.
II. Among the things commanded, sanctity is the first,
that they be kept holy.
' See p. 173, note f.
182 God lyiust be worshipped no less in public
S E R M. (1.) Which will theu be done, if botli in public and private
YTTT
'- — we perform those holy duties that belong unto them.
In public, to come and meet together at the church, to
make an holy convocation to the Lord, as upon such days
Lev. 23. 3. Himsclf cujoius, there to celebrate divine service in the
public place of God^s worship, and to do Him open homage
in the sight of all men ; in brief, there to do as we tell you
and invite you to do here, when first we begin to assemble
together ; that is, first to acknowledge, and with an humble,
lowly, penitent and obedient heart, to confess our manifold
sins and wickedness, without any dissembling or cloaking of
them, to the end that we may obtain forgiveness of the same,
by God's infinite goodness and mercy. To Avhich end, first
you make your confession, and we as God's ministers pro-
nounce the absolution ; — then, to render thanks for the great
benefits which daily we have received at His hands, and to
set forth His most worthy praise, — for which purpose the
Church hath next appointed us our psalms and our hymns,
to be said and sung in their order ; — after this, to hear His
most holy word, and to learn your duties from what you
hear, not only in the sermon, which is an explanation of His
word, but in the lessons and the gospels too, which are God's
word itself. And lastty, to ask those things which be requisite
and necessary, as well for the body as the soul ; and this in
the litanies, prayers, collects, and supplications that follow.
This to do both morning and evening, as the Church hath
enjoined us ; and besides this, to give attendance also to all
other holy actions that are publicly done and performed in
the church, but especially to the blessed Sacrament of the
Body and Blood of Christ, which, for my part, I think the
Church's intention is, as well for the honour of our SaAdour,
as for our own good and benefit, to have celebrated a little
oftener than it is. 1 say, for the honour of our Sa^dour, —
and we are at a holy work when we are honouring Him —
not only because thereby we submit om'selves to His ordi-
nance, that would have the memory of His precious passion
daily preserved till His coming again, but because in this
service we honour those things in Him, wliich all the rest of
the world besides despise and contemn, — I name tlic humility
of His incarnation, the baseness and bitterness of His death.
than in private. 183
the ignomiuy of His cross, the multitude of His sufferings —
all which we honour and adore, — though other miscreants of
the Avorld abhor them, and scorn our Saviour for them — in
using and frequenting this holy Sacrament. And it is to be
lamented, nay and I trow it is to be amended too, that we
honour Christ no oftencr this Avav. Had St. Chrysostom
lived among us, he would have complained most bitterly
against us, not only for defrauding ourselves of many graces
and helps, that might come to us by the frequent use of it,
but also, and that chiefly, for despoiling Christ, as much as
in us lies, of His highest and most peculiar honour that He
hath reserved to Himself, et cum sit panis quotidiamis facitis
Eum panem annuum^, as he said, ' What, come ye once a year
to your daily food?' he speaks of the Sacrament, which was
then called panis quotidianus^ , as well as our own that we
feed our bodies with daily ; but feed our bodies no oftener
with the one than usually we do now our souls with the
other, and I trow they will quickly famish. Neither do I
know any reason why there should not as good care be taken
for the soul, and the due honour of Christ, as there is for the
body and the daily respect that we give, and look to be given
to ourselves. Sure I am this would keep the day more holy
than it useth to be kept without it, for it would be sancta
Sanctis^, men would study and give themselves to more holi-
ness upon it; and I would it were so, that the holy Sacrament
might always and ever accompany this holy day^, and some
of you at one time and some at another might assist at that
holy, the holiest of all holy services. And this now for our
holy duties in public.
Besides which there is somewhat to be done in private,
that must tend to holiness also, and to the sanctity of the
day; for to be holy in the church, and unholy at home or
abroad, is just as much as to say, Ave, Rex Christe, and then Mat. 27.
to spit in His face ; to cry Hosanna to the Son of David, in
^ ' ^ ' Mat. 21.
29.
Ma
29.
^ See Bingham, xv. 9. § 2. nem percipere, nee laiido nee vitupero.
* Ibid. Omnibus tanien dominicis diel)us coni-
' Probably suggested to the mind of municandum suadeo et hortor, si tamen
the writer from liaving fomied part of mens sine aflectu peccati sit. Gennad.
the service of the Mass according to IMassil. de Ecclesias Dogmat. cap. 53.
the use of Sarnm. p. 31. edit. Hamb. 1614.
f Quotidie Eucharistise communio-
184 The Lord's day must be kept holy.
S E R M. the temple, and then to crucify Iliiu at Golgotha, as the
•^ ■ Jews and miscreant people did; therefore, to keep the day-
Mat. 27. 1 1 • • i. 1.
33 holy in private too.
And that, by instructing both ourselves and our families
in the ways of God ; by reading, praying, and meditating
upon such things as we have learned, for the good of our
souls, for the correcting of our former sins, for the amend-
ment of our lives, and for the exercise of all other spiritual
virtues, and good deeds whatsoever.
But in the meanwhile ye shall know, that though this
private holiness and service be good and godly, yet that ye
do not your duties unless ye attend the public besides ; for
God and His Cluu'ch will have neither of them to go alone.
The voice of joy and thanksgiving is in the dwellings of
ver. 15. the righteous, saith king David, when he prophesied in the
hundred and eigliteenth Psalm of this very day. And truly
in the dwellings of the righteous at home, if there it be, it
does well, though I am afraid lest in many of our houses
there be no such holiness ; yet put the case there be, let us
believe men when they say they serve God at home, though
thej be not here at His church, the prophet will tell us
that that home-serving will not serve God's turn ; He must
have it in afrio sancto too, in His own dwelling, as well as
ours. And therefore at the nineteenth verse he goes on and
says aperite mihi jwr'tas, go and open me the gates of righte-
ousness, that is, the church doors, that he might come and
enter into the courts of the Lord; his own house, as holy
as it was, might not hold him, but he would go into the
tabernacle of God, and fall down low before His foot-
Ps. 22. 22. stool, even in the midst of the congregation, he calls it
the great congregation, in reference to the great solemnity
of the day ; when indeed he would have it so great that it
Ps.118.27. might constituere diem solennem in condensis, usque ad cornua
Altaris, — they are his OAvn words — fill the Church so full, as
that the people might be seen to stand thick in it, from the
very entrance of the door to the very edge of the Altar ; that
is, from the very lowest to the very highest place of the
church. And let this be enough for the first rule, that these
days be kept with sanctity and holiness, both public and
private.
It must be a day of rest, but not of idleness. 185
(2.) For tlic better observance whereof^ follows the second
thing coninianded in the keeping of this day ; which is, rest
from our servile and unnecessary labours.
Which rest, if we consider it alone by itself, is not properly
any part of the sanctification and holiness whereof avc speak,
but a means and help only to the readier practice and more
free performance of it.
And a good means it is ; for if we be taken up with other
worldly and ordinary employments, how can we attend the
service and holy things of God ? Therefore, to rest this while
from them, that we may be the more free both in body and
in mind to be at God's commandment, and wholly to addict
ourselves to the knowledge, contemplation, and practice of
spiritual and heavenly duties, so to rest that nothing may
trouble or hinder us from doing God both the public and
private service that He and His Church requireth at our
hands.
And this is that which the Psalmist speaks, vacate et videte^;
first vacate, rest from your bodily labour, to distinguish the Ts. 4G. lo.
day ; and then videte, come hither to behold God's presence
in holiness, to sanctify the day ; so that in keeping of all
holy days, there is still a cessate, a rest from bodily and
servile labour. For ordinary labours are both in themselves
painful, and base also in comparison of festival services done
to God; in regard whereof the very natm*al difference be-
tween them must needs enforce that the one should submit
and give way to the other, because neither of them can
concur and be done together. And besides of rest for this
pui'pose, all that ever made trial what it was to have the soul
busied in high matters wiU certainly say, as the philosopher
said truly, postulandis esse secessum ut melius intendamus ; we
must give over other cares, if we mean to intend these here
as we should do.
By all which ye see here that we take not rest for idleness.
They are idle, who to avoid painfulncss will not use the
labour whereunto God and nature hath bound them ; they
'■ Cum enim Sabbato sigiiificetur tur honihies ab ipso Domino dieenlc,
spiritalis requics, de qua dictum est ' Venito ad Me, omnes' &c. S. August.
Psalmo 45. (16.) JO, ' Vacate et videti", Epist. 110. ad Januar. § 12. Opp. ii.
qiioniam J'^go sum Deus,' et quo vocan- liV.i. cd. Beued. 17('0.
186 // is a day for Ch-istian joy and liberality.
S E R M. restj wliicli either cease from tlicir work when thev have
"VTTT , , *'
: — done it and made it perfect, or else give over a meaner
labour because a worthier and a better is to be undertaken.
And of this latter sort is the rest that we speak of, and is
requisite for the better keeping and sanctifying the holy
days and festivals of God. So have you the two first,
sanctity and rest.
We come to the other two properties, joy and bounty.
For the days which are chosen out to serve as public memo-
rials of God's mercies to us, ought to be clothed with those
outward robes of festivity, whereby their difference from
other days may be made sensible.
(3.) And that joy and gladness is one of these, we have
Ps. 118.24. express Scripture for it, from the mouth of the prophet
David, ' This is the day which the Lord hath made, let us
rejoice and be glad in it;' and from the mouth of God Hini-
Lev.23.40. self, ' In your solemn feasts ye shall take of the goodly fruits,
and branches of the trees, and you shall eat your bread with
joy, and rejoice before the Lord.'
According to the rule of which general directions taken
from the law of God, the practice of the Clim-ch hath ever
been guided ; that is, in regard of the natural fitness and
decency of the thing itself, and not with reference to any
Jewish ceremonies, such as were properly theirs, and ai'c not
by us expedient to be continued.
But this of joy, is so expedient and natural for a festival
solemnity, that without it, it seems no feast at all, seems
rather one of those black and dismal days, wherein well may
we be humbled Avith sorrow and fasting, for some punish-
ment that justly befel us iipon the day, but ucknoAvledge no
benefit or great work of Clirist, such as was done for us upon
this day.
Fasting then, and sitting all day pensive and still upon
Sundays, as the use of some' is, is no good Christianity"^, is
unnatural and no way suitable to the honour of the day, nor
no way decent in itself, neither; because, Avhilc the mind
hath just occasion to adorn and deck herself with gladness,
' See Heylyii on the Salibatli, part 2. § .'), and Heylyn on the Sabbath,
ii. chap. S. 5 •*<• part ii. chap. 3. § 8.
•* See Bingliam, xvi. 8. § 3, and xx.
Uliat is forbidden to be done on this day. 187
as upon the apprclicnsion and meditation of Christ's benefits
tliis day it hath, the need of sorrow and pensivcness becometh
her not'.
(4.) To joy and cheerfulness we add bounty and liberality,
which is required in them that abound, partly as a sign of
their own joy and thankfulness to God, expressed by any
oblation to Him, and partly as a means whereby to rcfresli
the poor and needy ; who being, especially at these times,
made partakers of relaxation and joy Avith others, do the
more religiously bless God with us, and the more contentedly
endure the burden of that hard estate wherein they continue.
Neither did the old Christians, that were any ways able,
think any Lord's day, or other holy day, rightly observed by
them, wherein they brought not their offering to the Church'",
in sign of thankfulness to God, and gave not their alms to
the poor" besides, in sign of amity and love to their brethren.
For which we have exj^ress Scripture also, both from the
mouth of God, ' Ye shall not appear before the Lord empty ;' Dent. \G.
and from the mouth of St. Paul, ' Laying aside every first day ^^'
of the week (which this day is) for the necessity of the saints.^ iCor.lG.2.
This was the manner of keeping holy days in old time; and
all these things that ye have heard commanded, as properly
belonging to them, but especially and above all to the Lord's
day.
III. And now by these things that are commanded ye
may easily collect both what is forbidden, and what is
permitted.
(1.) Forbidden first, profaneness, unholiness, the opposite
to sanctity; all sin and wickedness in private, all careless
and retchlcss' attendance of God's holy seri-ice in public. " heedless
Not that these are lawful or permitted upon any other day
besides, but that upon this day we be more wary and
cautelous^, when we are to have our special conversation « cautious
with God and His Church, than we use to be upon other
days, when we converse with men and the afi'airs of the
world. And be we all assured, that though sin and profane-
ness upon any day shall be punished, yet if it be not only
done, but done upon this day too, it shall have a double
1 S. August. Opp. ii. 53. edit. 1700. " See Bingham, xv. S. § 12.
™ See Bingham, xv. 2. § 1.
188 Sin more sinful on this day.
S E II M. punishment ; one for the sin itself, and another for profaning
— ^ the day.
So that against this commandment, generally, they all
offend which will not cease from their own carnal wills and
pleasures, but follow them on still upon the Sunday, as they
did all the week befoi'e.
And they in special, that regarding neither the holiness of
this day, nor the holiness of this place, come |not at it to do
their bounden duty and service to God, but pass their time
either in idleness, or riot, or other vain and idle pastimes.
St. Austin said well of them, these people keep not Subba-
thum Jeliovce, but Sabbatuni Satana ; they keep holy day for
the devil and not for God ; and should be better employed,
says he, labouring and ploughing in theii* fields, than so to
spend the day in idleness and vanity ; and women should
better bestow their time in spinning of wool [lanani et linam
are his words) than upon the Lord's day to lose their time
leaping and dancing, and other such wantonness". There-
fore qui vacant peccatis, Jiugis, choreis, spectaculis, in diebus
Dominicis are all, in St. Austin's judgment, breakers of this
holy commandment of God and profaners of His festival.
For following sins and wickedness, the satisfaction of men's
own lusts, I told you he called it Sabbatum Satanm^ ; for
following idleness, and sport, and lewd pastimes, he calls it
Sabbatum vituli aurei ; they that skipped about the golden
calf kept as good a holy day as these.
(2.) The next thing forbidden, which I can but name now,
is servile and bodily labour; our worldly employments, though
other days never so lawful, being the opposite to rest, and
the hindrance of all religious exercises and public duties
upon this day, as we have before declared.
They, therefore, that have herein contemned the ordinances
of God and His Church, and whereas God hath given them
so many days for themselves and their own affairs, must
" Dicitur tibi xit spiritualiter ob- rent, quam tola die in neomeniis suis
serves Sabbatum ; non quonioilo Judaei impudice saltarent. S. August, de
observant Sabbatum carnali otio. Va- Decern Cliordis. See also in Psal.
care enim volunt ad nugas atque luxu- l;5;5, Enarr. 2. Opp. iv. 1 13, and Enarr.
rias suas. Melius enim faceret Judanis in Psal. 91. p. 737.
inagro suo aliquid utile, quani in thea- p So also St. Cbrysoslom, Horn. vi.
tro seditiosus existerct. Et melius in Genes, (ii. 4.5. edit. Franeof.) cited
femin:e eorum die Sabbati lanam face- 1>\- Bingham, xvi. 8. § \.
Its sanctity always enforced. 189
needs make bold with tliis and profane it also, have ever been
severely censured. And truh'j the voluntary, scandalous
contempt, such as otherwhiles m'C see among some of our
people, of the rest from labour, by means whereof God is
publicly served upon this day, cannot too severely be cor-
rected and bridled. Xchemiah protested against them, and Neli. i;5.
so do we, and so hath the Chnrcli of God, and the Christian ..'' ^'^' ''-
superiors and governors of God's people ever done, pleading
for the honour of Christ and for this day of His resurrection,
in their sermons, in their laws, in tbeir edicts i, everywhere
most fully and religiously. I thought to have produced them
now, but I think I have said enough for once, and the next
time by God's help I shall end all.
To which God, the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, ascribe
■we, &c.
1 See Bingham, xvi. 8. § 1 ; Ileylyn, part ii. chap. 3. § 10.
SEEM ON XIV.
AT PARIS. COKAM DUCE JACOBO. SEPTEMBER 11, l(ii>0". [nEW STYLE.]
S E R M.
XIV.
Psalm cxxix. 5.
Confundantur omnes qui oderunt Sion.
Let them be confounded, as many as have evil ivill at Sion.
I HAVE read you a verse out of a Psalm wliicli I find cited
by an old provincial council of tlie ancient Fathers '', as no
'applicable less pertinent and applyable' to tlie Cliurch in all ages under
Christ, and so in ours, than it was in any age before under
the Jews<^.
"Where the Psalmist, as his manner is, compriseth under
one, the type and the truth both; by those things wliich
befel the people of the Jews in their Sion, shadowing and
setting out those things which would afterwards and otlier-
^JudfEa whiles happen to the Christians likewise in theirs'^; for Jury*
was the scene, or stage, whereon the estate of us all — as we
are a society, either in Cliurch or kingdom — was represented
to all posterity.
There is in it a prophecy, and a prayer % which belongs to
" Thissermon was originally preached
by Cosin 'at St. German's in France,
October 22, 1045,' but the connnence-
nicnt abounding with interlineations
and erasures, was transcribed before its
second delivery on the occasion men-
tioned above. Tlie more important varia-
tions between the two transcripts are
specified in the notes.
'' Which tlie ancient Fathers abroad,
and after them an old ])rovincial council
liere in France, have judged no less
pertinent to the Church in all ages.
' Mystice conveniunt hcec Ecclesias
turn militanti, turn triumphanti pree-
sertiin, in qua una est occnpatio, nego-
tium unum .... Sion et llierusalcm
allegorice Ecclesiam istam denotant,
anagogice superiorem illani cadestcm-
que. Lorin. in Psalmos, torn. iii. p. 715.
■* Pro ecclesia proqiie ccelesti beato-
rum doniicilio mystice passim exponi-
tur, qucmadmodum aliis in locis. Lorin.
in Vs. 128. 5; tom. iii. p. G!0.
"^ A prophecy of the evil and mis-
chief that was like to befall both a
The text is both a prayer and a prophecy. 191
tliera both, and are botli directed against tlic enemies of
eitlier; the sum •\vhercof is, tliat tliey who would have Sion
confounded, that is. Church and kingdom destroyed, for Sion
is both, may, by the grace of God, have the same mischief
tiu-ned back upon their own heads, and so be destroyed and
confounded themselves.
Conjundaiitur omnes, qui oderunt Sion. A prayer and a pre-
diction both, for the words Avhich we read here, both in our
Psalter and in our church Bibles, as a prayer, the translators
that were wont to send us their Bibles here from France f,
they received it as a prediction ; and, to do them right, so
they might, and so may we, read it either way ; either in the
optative, 'So let them be,' or in the indicative s, 'So they
shall be*^,' for the verb in the original is of the future tense.
And indeed to express their optative, or their Avishing prayers
in Hebrew, they have no other way but this, that hard it is
many times, to say whether that which runs in the future
among them be a prayer or a prediction ; and for aught I
know, it must be left to our discretion to take which we will,
since it may be both; as in the twenty-first Psalm, ' The ver. i.
king shall rejoice,' by way of foretelling, or ' Let the king re-
joice,' by way of wishing; and in many places besides. It
will be best to take it both ways, so we shall be certain not
to miss the prophet's meaning. And though either be well,
either indicative or optative, that both are best, for both are
most true; it is both a good prayer, and a good prophecy;
which will likewise sort well together by themselves, and
please us, if the prayer does prove a prophecy, nothing better.
For our wishes, if they be in earnest, Ave would always have
to be ominous ; and our prayers to be a kind of prediction
e\'er.
glorious Church and an ancient king- themselves.
dom, for Sion here is hoth, in times to ' ' From Geneva.' The reading to
come ; which were not much unlike to which Cosin alludes is this ; ' They tliat
such times as these ; and a prayer of hate Zion shall be all ashamed and
returning that mischief hack again to turned backward.'
the place and persons from whence it e Imperative aut optative sumi h»c
came: that they who by their fiery and possunt, quamvis Hebraice sint futuri
evil will at Sion would have both the temporis verba in indicativo mode,
religion destroyed and the kingdom Graece in imiierativo. Lorm. in Ps. 128.
confounded, may, by the grace of 5. torn. iii. p. 640.
God, have the same mischiefs upon ^ See Poli Synops. and Hammond
their own heads and be confounded on this Psalm.
192 Divmon of the subject.
s E R M. Of this text tliciij avc <irc to treat as a praver, first, then as
'— a prediction.
A dii'ect prayer it is ; but that is not so much, the manner
of it is all. And there be two manner of prayers, either
for or against, -vvishiug some good, or wishing some evil, be
it of things or of persons. This is of the nature of a prayer
against them.
Then secondly, it is not faintly or coldly said ; but
said it is with very much vehemence and vigour, as the
manner of men is when they are in passion and anger ; for
there is a holy anger too, whereof otherwhiles use may be
made, thereafter as the cause is wherewith it meets; and
this is such another, it is a kind of prayer that they call an
imprecation ; confundantur is a kind of curse, an imprecation,
or an execration, call it Avhich you will.
And thirdly, two things there are in this prayer, (1.) the
parties against Avliom it is made, and (2.) the persons for
Avliose sake it is made.
1. The parties against whom, are the enemies of Sion,
that is, of Chm'ch and kingdom both, for in Sion we shall
find them both ; and those parties be many, and of many
kinds, whereof not a man here is left out, sed omnes qui
oderunt, where the omnes Avill reach not only to every private
man, but to whole multitudes besides ; and the oderunt will
reach not only to the outward noleut act, but to the very
iuAvard will itself, to ' as many as have any evil will at Sion,'
for so our Church-book here hath rendered it, and we may
not leave it out.
2. After these, the parties for whose sake this prayer is
made, are those that dwell in Sion ; and they will prove to
be God and the king : we say it now, and will prove it anon.
And thus far it will go as a prayer.
Then should we also look upon it as a prediction — but
that I think we shall not be able to do so now ; — for besides
that it is a prayer, it is likewise, as I said, a prophetical
prayer; that so the prophet here wished, and, as he wished,
so he foretold ; and, as he foretold, so it came to pass, to the
confusion of them that hated Sion; so did, and so may
do yet; for this prayer or prediction was not to be pent
up among the Jews only, or to end with them, but hath, and
The bidding of the Common Prayers. 193
shall have, its force and ^dgour still among us all; even to the
world's end.
These are the parts. Of which that we may speak to the
honour of God and the preservation of Sion, the Church, and
kingdom, and His true religion among us, Ijefore I go any-
further I shall put' you in mind both now and always to
make your prayers.
For the estate of Christ's Catholic Church, together
with the peace and welfare of all Christian kings and
princes, more especially — as by common allegiance w^e are
all bound, and myself with others here by more peculiar
duty and service — for our'"' sovereign lord Charles, by the
grace of God king of Great Britain, France', and Ireland,
Defender of the Faith, and in his own dominions over all
persons whatsoever, and in all causes whatsoever, supreme
governor ; that God would be pleased to preserve him in
his royal person, and to protect him in his royal dignities,
and to restore him to his royal inheritance™ ; for our most
gracious queen M., for our most noble prince James, duke
of York", and all the royal progeny, for the king's majesty's
honourable council and all the nobility, for the rev;erend
the prelates and the ministers of the Church, for the
Universities of Cambridge and Oxford, and all the people
of the realm; that they may all come together to serve God
in peace, to be loyal to their king, and loving to one
another.
Rendering always, as we are likewise bound, our praise
and thanksgiving for God's favours and graces conferred
upon His Chmxh, for the blessed Fathers of our faith,
the saints and servants of God Avho have been the choice
vessels of His grace and the shining lights of the world in
theu' several generations before us, and for the happy
' The following sentence is here and actions.'
struck out. 'I shall first make that ^ 'own' erased,
prayer which St. Austin made before ' This word has been added above the
one of his sermons ; that God would line on the revision of the sermon,
vouchsafe, quod utiliter mediiatum est n' Instead of the last clause, which
cor meum et lingua persoriat, what my is added above the line, tlie original
heart hath profitably thought on, that reading v.as, ' and to preserve him in his
my tongue shall utter, to bring it thence royal amis against the fraud and in-
into your ears, and from thence into justice of all ill doers.'
your hearts, and from thence into your " Instead of James duke of York,
words, and from thence into your lives prince Charles was here mentioned.
COSIN. Q
194< Tliat we may iiray against our enemies
s E R M. departure of all other His servants our fathers and
"V" TV"
'- — brethren in the faith of Christ ; most humbly beseeching
Him that we may continue in their holy communion and
rehgion here, and that we may at the end be brought to
their blessed communion and glory hereafter.
And thatj for His merits Who is Christ our Lord, the
Mediator and SaAdour of us all ; in His name offering up
that form of prayer which He hath prescribed us in His
holy Gospel.
Our Father, &c., &c.
1. 'Let them be confounded.' I begin with the prayer.
But confimdantur is a prayer and somewhat more be-
sides; it is an imprecation, both precatio and imprecatio.
Therefore before we say 'Amen' to it, it vnW not be amiss
to enquire whether we may lawfully pray any such prayer,
or no.
I more it the rather, because I have heard it said that
here our Church is out, that it is not warrantable, that it
is altogether unsuitable for a Christian — whatever the Jews
did — to use such prayer or imprecation at all; to wish, as
here the prophet does, any evil-minded persons so much evil
as to pray that they may come to an evil end, which is theii'
confundantur, ' let them be confounded.''
And truly somewhat it is that they have to say ; for did
not St. Paul give us a charge not to do it ? not to do it to
Rom. 12. them that did hurt to us? ' Bless them that persecute you;
^' bless, I say, curse not;' that is, use no imprecations at all.
lPet.2.21. And did not St. Peter set us out Christ's own pattern against
it ? Qui, cum malediceretur, non maledixit, AVho wished not
their evil that both wished and wrought Him all the evil
Jas.3.9,10. they could. Again, St. James tells us well it becomes us not
that with the same tongue we should bless God and curse
Num. 22. men, or pray for evil to come upon them. ' Come and curse
5^;^ 23. 7, jjjg ^i^^g people,' let that office alone for Balaam the son of
Beor ; it is an office fitter for him than for any of us. Then
2 Sam. 16. Shimei did it; it belongs to such a miscreant as he was, it
belongs not to us. Balaam's name and his stand upon
record, upon the black roll, to all posterity ; the one
for doing of it, and the other for but intending to do it;
proved by the example and jiermission of Scripture. 195
and will we be like-minded to them? All this they have
against it.
And all this we know ; yet all this has been examined by
the Fathers of the Chui'ch before now, and all this is not so
binding neither bnt that against some persons, and in some
special cases, such a prayer hath been, and may still be used
well enough. ISIay be ? nay, ought to be otherwhiles. For
first, such and so evil may the persons be, as for instance,
saith St. Peter, those that despise government and speak e\i] 2ret.2.io.
of dignities, — which is all one with them that have evil will
here at Sion — so evil may such persons be, that in the same
Apostle's own words, they be homines escsecrandi, men that 2Pet.2.l4.
are to be accursed, and maledictionis filii, the very sons and
subjects of malediction. Thus execrable may their doings
be, that as God Himself commandeth Moses, so by him He Deut. ii.
commands us all and gives us Hcence and a warrant to do it; ^^' '^''^^'
in such a case to go up into mount Ebal, and there to do as
our Chiu'ch appoints us to do in the commination" ; that is,
against certain persons to pronounce certain curses; the
priest is to say maledictus, and all the people to say ' Amen.'
He that gave us the charge therefore, St. Paul, not to do it, Rom. 12.
must be understood to have given it against private revenge; ^*'
for notwithstanding all his charge given, it is well enough
known what he himself did to Elymas the sorcerer, who Acts 13. 8.
withstood him in his public service ; called him the child of
the devil, and struck him bhnd with an imiJrecation. And
he that set us Christ's pattern, St. Peter, would not be taken iPet.2.21.
in any other sense ; for notwithstanding his pattern set us,
we know all that he used this kind of imprecation himself
against Simon Magus, and gave him his confundantur ; Acts s. 20.
against such it both may be done, and ought to be done.
Nor let the instance of Balaam and Shimei trouble us ; they
were two fierce and violent men, and they came out to curse
them whom God had blessed, to curse the ruler of His people. Num. 23.
and to curse Sion itself; which brought therefore a curse ^^ .f^^"'^'
upon their own heads for it. But there were two other men,
as meek men and as mild as ever the earth had ; and yet, as
we read, they came to their imprecations for all that. Moses
for one, who prayed it against a crew of rebels that they Num. i
30, 6.
° Upon Ash-Wednesday.
o2
19G The evidence continued.
s K R M. sliould not die the common death of all men^ but go down
'— quick into hell ; and David for another^ who prayed it
against a counseller of rebels, that cursing might come into
his bowels like water, and like oil into his bones. Witness
Ps.109.18. first, one Psalm all of bitter imprecations and scarce of any-
thing else, all penned against Achitophel and against all such
as be like him ; then another against those that were con-
federate against his crown and dignity; and this verse is the
sum of them both. But in these Psalms themselves thev are
set forth in such high and passionate expressions, that they
had been held, both by Jews and Christians, to be the most
heavy and bitter curses that were to be found in all the
volumes of the world besides. The one is the hundred and
nineteenth!', the other the eighty-thirdq Psalm; and I am
apt to believe that whosoever shall take the book into his
hands, and at some retiring-time read with heed and mark
well against what manner of persons those two Psalms of
imprecations are penned, he would love both them and their
fellows, Avliosoever they be, the worse for it while he lived.
Judg.5.23. Now what should I tell you of the Angel of the Lord, of
the Lord Himself, that cursed the inhabitants of Meros, and
thereby gave us a warrant to do the Hke after Him ? that is,
that we may lawfully bring forth an imprecation, not only
against them that are open enemies and have an e^dl will at
Sion, but against them likewise that are indifferent and bear
it no good Avill at all. All is thereafter as the cause is, and
as the persons be against whom the prayer is made ; if the
cause be right the imprecation is not wrong, and the cause
is all. [Now put all this together and it is enough, this,
notwithstanding all that useth otherwhiles to be said against
it, to shew that this kind of prayer is also lawful among
others, and to justify the practice of the Chvirch, if at any
time you meet with it there, for it is the practice of the
saints ; we may well pray it, for herein we do but tread the
•* De argumento antiquorum cxposi- rerum malarum, sub maledictionum
torum rccc'iJta sententia est Judani esse forma, pr»dictioncs. Loriii. in Ps.
Cliristi iJroditoreiii pra>cipue, turn alios 108. I. toin. iii. -p. 232.
ejusdem persecutoies Judceos ; conse- q Aniplector magis universalem sen-
quenter etiam similes istis alios, qui sum, et cum Euthemyo, Nicephoroque
proditorie violent charitatem ; ita ut in aio eonvenire psalmum cunctis \no
Judam prassertim, deiiulc in alios ctiani Christo persecutionem paticntibus. Lo-
malcdiclioucs Lie pronuntientiir, ant rin. in Ps. 83. 1, torn. ii. p. 575.
Imprecatory prayers must be used with caution. 197
steps of oxir holy Fatlicrs, and follow them who were
followers herein of God Himself ^]
Nor need wc, nor will we, go out of the text to seek it.
For first, you will mark it here, that it is for the safety of
Sion, for that cause, and then that it is against them that
have an evil will to Sion, against such persons only and for
their confusion who either %dolently oppose it or secretly
undermine it. In which cases it is not only lawful but
needful, not only may he done but sometimes ought to be
done ; for prayers are to be made for Sion, that is, once and
for all that belong to it. But for Sion we cannot pray, not
as we should do, unless we pray withal against them that are
enemies to Sion ; avIio, if they may have their will, will be
the utter confusion of Sion itself. Therefore in this case,
confandantur qui oderunt is no more than needs, and is
plainly forced from us, specially then, when we have scarce
any other way left but that, as with the Jews it was the case
often, and is not with us much unlike it now^ All is there-
after as the necessity and the occasion or the cause is ; if
that be right, we may be sure the prayer, and this kind of
prayer too, will not be wrong.
And indeed this is the chief point of ad\'ice for us, that we
use it not but when we are forced to it ; that we take not a
licet for it without an oportet come before it ; that is, that
we use it not upon every slight and trifling occasion, as our
e\al custom is, against every thing that comes cross to our
own private humour. But when the public safety of the
Church and kingdom, when the safety of Sion and the bad
practices of Sion's enemies shall require and exact it at our
hands, then may we be bold to do it. And this ad\'ice is not
amiss, the rather because our common and fearful j)rofana-
tion of this kind of prayer, our bitter cm'ses and imprecations
that come from us daily where no need is, may well be
thought to be one main reason, among others, that Avhere
and when need is, the very lawful use of it in our prayers
finds no better effect with us than it does.
Again, it is not amiss we took notice of an old saying
r The passage included within « It will be remembered that this
brackets appears to have been marked sermon was preached to the exiled
for omission. English court then resident in Paris.
198 Against whom we may laivfully pray.
s E 11 M. among tlie Hebrews which is pertiueut to this case. They had
— '— in their countiy two mountains, one where they Avent to bless,
at mount Garizim*, and another where they went to curse, at
mount Ebal ; of which two their proverb was, that they came
time enough to mount Ebal that crept thither, but to mount
Garizim that they could not leap too fast ; that is, that men
must be swift to do the one and slow to do the other. To
conclude this point ; we are then, as not to be so forward to
leap into mount Ebal and fall to our prayers and impreca-
tions there, upon every thing that angers us, so not to be so
froward neither, as when we are directed and bidden go, not
to come there at all, but to be well advised ere we go ; and
then we may both safely go thither, and go to some puqjose.
The cause it is, and the heed it is against what persons it is
made, which maketh the prayer lawful; otherwise if it be
either used without cause, or done without care, it will be
done amiss, and have little or no effect at all ; therefore to
know well both the men and the matter against whom we do
it, and then we may say this prayer every syllable of it, con-
fundantur omnes qui oderunt Sion.
2. The special point of adAdce then being thus provided
for, it will concern us now to know the parties Avell against
whom we are to pray it, and to take some notice of them ;
and we cannot better know them than if we take our light
from this book, and, as they shall have reference to this text,
apply them as you shall see cause.
They offer themselves to us here in a general term, ' as
many as have evil will at Sion ■/ but those many are many
and sundry ways to be known by the characters that are
elsewhere given of them.
You will know them the better if you know first, what
Sion is, and how far it extends. I told you before that
Sion would be found to be both the house of God and the
house of David, that is, both tlie religion of the temple and
the government of the kingdom ; Church and state both ;
the Church of God and the state of the king ; so that they
which have any evil will at either of these are the parties
here against whom this prayer is to go out.
First, and to prove what I say, I demand first, Avhy the
' Dcut. 27. 12, 13; see Seldeni 0pp., tom. ii. p. 1550.
Sion esteemed by God for His temple's sake. 199
prophet liatli made choice of Siou only, to name that ? why
not Judah and Israel? or why not Jerusalem, as well as
Sion ? for they were the greater places of the two, and the
more general by far, and, as one would think, the more
Avorthy to be named. Why then is not the prayer and
imprecation made against the haters of them? but against
those that have an evil will at Sion only ?
It should seem there was somewhat more in Sion than
there was in all the rest, somewhat more to be regarded
there, than any where else; the choice is made of Sion
before them all. Yet to give Jerusalem and Judah, the city
and the countr}^ their due, it is not exclusive this of either ;
but yet it is preferred before them both, for somewhat that
there is in Sion more than in the city and country too, and
that are they to bear as they can ; for it is not in our power
to mend the text for them, nor in theii's, neither. The pro-
phet hath made choice of Sion, and we may not change his
word, nor teach him how to use his terms. He names nothing
but Sion. I ask then, what was Sion? what was it but a
hiU, a Httle hiU in Jerusalem, with two tops upon it, on the
south side of the city ? And what reason then was there that
this hill should be so much magnified as it was ? seldom or
never mentioned in Scripture but with honour and regard
had to it ? Trul}^ no reason in the world but this, that upon
one top of this mountain, the temple of God was built ; and
upon another, the throne of the king. For these tAvo it was
that it is here named before all the rest, and so that Sion is
so much spoken of and so much made of, all the Psalms and Ps.2.6;48.
all the prophets over; it is first and chiefly, for the temple's C9.'3.5,&c.
sake, for God's rehgion and service that was there kept up J^- ]: ^J >
among them ; for Whose sake it is, even for His Chm'ch's
sake, as poor and low a regard as the world has for it now,
that Sion is said to be His holy mountain, a fair place, and Ps. 2. 6.
the joy of the whole earth, that God is well known in her Ps.48.2,3.
palaces as a sm'e refuge, and that He loveth the gates of Ps. 87. 2.
Sion more than all the dwellings of Jacob besides, loves it
more, and therefore will be the more displeased with them
here that love it not. For in that it is chiefly mentioned, it
shews both what is chiefly regarded by God, and what is
chiefly also to be regarded by us, as we know it was by them
200 JVho those are ivho are here prayed against.
^ \vv^^' ^^^^ wept at the remembrance of it, when they were forced
- — to be absent from it^ ' we sat down and wept, when wc re-
' membered thee, oh Sion f tliat theii' greatest grief Avhen
they could not come at it, and their greatest joy when news
came that they shoukl return thither again.
Where tliere lays a note, by the way, for their joy ; it was
not, saith the Psalm, quia in domos nostras ibimus ; — they did
not listen, as we listen for our news, to hear chiefly when we
shall go every one to his own house and to his own honour
and lands again, and I am afi'aid fare the worse for it too, —
Vs. 42. 2 ; but, quia in domum Domini ibimus, ' when we shall go into
the house and honour of the Lord, and appear every one of
us before the God of gods in Sion.' That was their joy and
that their chiefest desire, of all other, to have the true and
pure services of God set up at home in peace among them ;
and if our thoughts went more that way than they do,
certainly God would be better pleased with us than He is.
Is. 62. 1. Who, as He hath given us His promise for it, that for Sion's
sake and for the house of the Lord our God, if we would set
our affections there. He will seek to do us good, — so for
want of those aS'ections, our affections to the gates of Sion,
it is still to be feared lest we be yet kept back from the
dwellings of Jacob.
In the meanwhile clear it is to you, who be the chief per-
sons that are said here to have an e\dl will at Sion; that
they be the mahgners of the Church, the haters of His temple,
and the enemies of His true religion, against whom this
confundantur may by good warrant be given out, and the
prayer go forth against every one that . loves not the peace
and prosperity of them all. For as for God Himself, He is
too high for them, cither for any good they can do Him or
for any e\il or enmity that can reach Him ; therefore He
reckons of no enemies but His Church's enemies, or at least
of none so much, as being that for which we were all, world
and all, made, and by which we and all the world are still
upholden; for were this Sion, this Clim-ch of His once
gathered, the world would dissolve straight; nor is it long
neither, before we arc like to hear of it, when there be no
more enemies to molest it. These are one sort of them.
(2.) But Sion had two tops ; as one whereon the temple
Tlie state cannot exist tvlthoiit the Church. 201
stood, so another Avhcrcon tlic throne and palace of the king
were situated. Fostil rer/em in monte sanclllatis mecv, ' I liavc ver. o.
set INTy king also upon My holy hill of Sion/ as we read in
the second Psalm ; Avhich, though it was mystically luider-
stood of Christ, yet it was literally true of David, So near
neighbourhood was there between the king and the Churcli,
as there was between his palace and the temple. They stood
both upon one and the same hill.
And it cannot but weigh much with all that shall weigh
this point well, that kings are taken into so near a society
and conjunction with God in Sion, that the league is so firm
and the knot so strait between them, as one cannot have ill
will to the one but he must have it to the other also. So
they that are enemies to David or the king, are enemies to
God and to Sion.
Another reason why Sion is here mentioned, that all
may know what regard they are to have of kings, whom God
hath placed so close to Himself, as there is but one name
here both for His Church and for them, so inseparably are
they linked together, and the prosperity of the one so much
deiDcnding upon the Avelfare of the other,
I cannot tell — some certain men may entertain what
speculations they please — to think that David's throne may
stand well enough though the temple be pulled down, or the
Church destroyed; but when we come at any time to see
these speculations of theirs brought into practice, to view
them in the fore-past ages of the world, or to look upon them
in these days of ours and see how we like them now, sure
we are we cannot find it so. Indeed, experience, daily and
sad experience, hath taught us that the safety of Sion
depends upon the two hills of Sion ; and that they that are
not for both are, to speak truth, for neither, but like to carry
Sion into Babel and to turn all into confusion. Against such
well and fitly may we pray this prayer, and say confundantur
to all of them.
So have we two manner of persons that be here meant ;
but there is yet somewhat more in the text against them.
(3.) They are said here to be many, nay they are said to
be all, omnes qui oderunt, not a man left out. Where, that
we may take all in, wc will take omnes in the two several
203 ' Vox populi' not ahvays ' Vox Dei.'
s E R M. notions or acceptions of the \\ox&, either omnes, collective, in
-^ — ^ a sense collective of all together, or omnes, distributive, in a
sense distributive of the sundry and divers kinds of thenij of
them that be enemies unto Sion.
From the first acception this we have, that it extends not
only to single and private persons, but reacheth to Avhole
multitudes, be they never so many; omnes Avill serve to take
in cities and towns and countries both, even the whole body
of the people, and all that would be independent of any, and
suflFer neither God nor the king to rule them. It hath been
thought, and it hath been taught likewise, that vox populi
might carry all, was as good as vox Dei, might come up into
mount Sion in multitudes, and there do Avith religion and
government what they pleased themselves. The prophet here
foresaw what it would come to, that the body and multitudes
of the people might chance this way to take a hberty to
themselves, and think to be privileged by their very number;
therefore to make sure, he puts in a number here that
encloseth them all; for be they many or be they few, as
many as they be omnes Avill exempt none. And let them
look to it that think to bear themselves out and to avoid it
with company; there is nothing so near a confundantur as
the multitude.
2. But from the second acception of omnes, they are
brought in every one in his kind. I will but name them
briefly. The Jews had not a few of them, and I think we
have had as many. For first they had the sons of Belial, who
lived within their own quarters ; and those were men that
had no religion at all and cared neither for the temple of
God nor for God Himself. "VVe call them the atheists, the
worst enemies that we, or they, had; for I wish the like
were not to be found in our Israel.
(2.) Then they had the children of Edom, a kind of wicked
and spiteful men, a people that neighboured" upon them and
were somewhat allied to them besides, but such mortal — such
immortal — haters^ of Sion and of the religion professed there,
as that we are told by many of the old writers, both Jews and
Christians, that this verse, and this Psalm, was penned of chief
" Rclaiuli Palest, p. 6fi ; Saliani =' Saliani Annal. A.M. 2J8.3. § 23.
Annalcs, A.M. 25 16. § K seqq. ; Loriii. torn. iii. p. 715.
Enumeration of the enemies of Sion. 203
purpose against them >'. I will give you a note or two of them,
that \o\\ may know both tliem and their venomous natui'cs.
First, they were the wickedest natured people under the sun,
and if ever there were any devils upon earth they were the men;
which was the original of the Hebrew proverb, that if the de\al
would choose to be of any country, he would choose to be an
Edomite. For no place on earth resembled hell more for all
manner of malice and wickedness, as we may read of it in
the prophet Malachi, than that country did. Then were they iMal. i. i,
the nearest to their borders, and the nearest akin to the
Jews of all nations besides, and so should have been their
best friends, and have borne no e^dl will to their Sion ; but
the quarrel was that the Jews had a larger and a better
country by far than they, the Edomites, had, and that their
temple was too much talked on abroad, got away the glory
from them all. Fi'om Avhence grew their &a\j ; and an Rom. 9. G.
enemy out of envy, though never so near a neighbom', nor
never so near akin, proves ever to be the worst. Yet once
more, they were always waiting to do Sion a mischief, and
when they were not able to do it alone of themselves, they
set on others from abroad, and then came in and helped
them ; and when the temple was plundered and fire set upon
the holy places, the}^ were the men that cried out so fast
' Down with it to the ground, down with it,' and let not a Ps. lar. r.
stone remain. For the next words of the Psalmist are,
' Remember the children of Edom, O Lord, how they said,'
as he says there, and for so saying gives forth this confun-
dantur here against them.
(3.) But thirdly, their next enemies were them of Babel,
men of another country and another religion, and I number
them among the enemies of the Church (though they did the
kingdom too all the mischief they might) not so much for Jt r. 21.7.
the spoils of the temple, that were carried thither at the
captivity, as for the cruelty that was used against them in
matters of reHgion, when they must either fall down before
an image and do as they did in all things, that is, be of the
new rehgion and follow the new laws that Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3. 2.
and his captains had lately set up, or endure the trial of the
fiery fm-nace; ye know who used to do so by us. They come
y Lorin. in Ps. torn. iii. p. 636.
204 Suffering is the privilege of God's people.
s E R M. all out of Bubyloii, but 'Babel' is 'confusion.' Acrainst all
XIV .. *
'— sucli it is lawful to say a confimdantur.
(4.) Besides these, Sion liad others also that bare it no
good will at home neither, who by raising up factions and
schisms among themselves thereby disturbed that peace and
unity of the Church which the prophet calls the blessing and
Ps. 133. 3. the dew of Sion. Of whom utinam ahscindantur, saith the
Gal. 5. 12. Apostle, qui conturbant vos; wdiere we have St. Paul's waiTant
that this prayer may be said in the T\ ew Testament as well
as in the Old, both against heretics and against schismatics
that raise tumults in rehgion and disquiet the peace of
Christ's Church ; a kind of people that do nothing else but
Ps. CO. 2. study to maintain their own faction, and make the breaches
of Sion wider than they are akeady.
To these might many more be yet added than have been
named, but you know them as well as I, what manner of
enemies and persons they are of whom this Psalm was made,
and against whom this prayer may be said, no less than it
was against the other. The conclusion would be, that against
them all, all are bound to say ' Amen' to this prayer. And
in the name of God, so let it be.
In the meanwhile, let it not seem strange to us that such
enemies there are, for Sion will never be without them, and
the best men on earth have been put to their trial with them.
It is some adversity that we suffer from them, biit it is sors
sanctorum, it hath been the lot of many a saint of God before
us, and of far more worth and dignity than any we are, to
Heb. 11. be in adversity, to be persecuted, afflicted, tormented, to be
robbed of goods, and lands, and lives and all. Nor did they
love Sion, either Church or kingdom, ever a whit the worse
for it all the while.
Sion God loved and favoui'ed very high, yet, how dear
soever Sion is in His sight, it had no promise made but that
Acts 13. such kind of enemies it should otherwhiles meet withal.
^^' Even king Da\id himself, a man after God's own heart, he
had them, had those that persecuted, hated him gratis, hated
him though they had many favours done them bv him, and
though they were fed with his milk yet was he bitten by them
for all that. Facient enhn quod suum est iniquitatis fdii, saith
St. Austin, ' the sons of wickedness will be doing their kind,'
Practical wfcrences from the subject.
205
though it be against king David or against any king besides,
though it be against Christ Himself. Let not this make us
stumble cither in our religion or loyalty, but that we may be
firm to our trial, and constant to our profession ; still, above
all, lo\dng the gates of our Sion, that is, of our religion, more
than all our other dwellings in Jacol) ; Avhich, by the grace of
God, may be a fail- means to bring us back again both to the
one and to the other, there, if it be His blessed will, to serve
Him in peace and piety all the days of our life, that so
serving Him we may in the end of our days be translated
from our dwellings here below to His everlasting tabernacles
above 2. To which, &c.
' Tlie following passage, originally
introduced here, lias afterwards been
omitted.
And that shall we coine to, not to
fail, if we can but take order that while
we be here, we prepare ourselves to be
temples for Him, that He may have
His dwelling in us, as He hath in Sion.
At Salem is His tabernacle, and His
dwelling in Sion. Oiu- bodies, as we
use the matter, many of us, are far
from being His temples, shops of vanity
and thrones of jiride rather, and I know
not well what to say of them.
15ut a course must be taken that
while we are here we make both Sions
and temples of them for the living God
to inhabit ; and that by His grace may
we do, and no way sooner tlian if we
love the service of His temple well ;
love it, and resort to it, and be often at
it. Of that service this is the highest,
that we see here before us. And sure,
if ever we have any thing of Sion, any
thing of a temple in us, then it is when
we are duly and devoutly employed,
they and we, in His worship and ser-
vice ; specially in this service, when we
cleanse the house and prepare our bodies
and souls to receive His blessed Body
and Blood. Then are we His temple
in Sion, and He dwelleth in us. From
whence if by defiling that temple we
expel Him not again, He will never
leave us until He hath, as I said, trans-
lated us unto His eternal temple in
heavenly places.
To which He, of His infinite mercy
vouchsafe to bring us all, that we may
all give glory and honour to Him for
evermore. Amen.
SERMON XV.
XV.
PARIS, FEB. 12, 1(551, [new STYLe] DOMINICA SEXAGESIMiT..
The word of God which we heard read but now in
Genesis iii. 13,
Et dixit Dominvs Dens ad mulierem, ^r.
And the Lord God said unto the ivonian, What is this that
thou hast done ? And the ivoman said, The serpent begtdled
me, [and I did eat.^
s E R M. A TEXT whereof I have made choice to-day to preach,
because it is a part, and the chiefest part, of that lesson
whereof the Church hath made choice this day to read^.
Before I begin with the text, I ^\dll first say somewhat of
the intent and reason that the Church had thus to order this
lesson this next Sunday after Septuagesima ; for there now
we are.
I ask then concerning this order, first, Why these days
have this appellation, and we are thus suddenly set back for
our lessons, both this Sunday and the last, from the pro-
phecies of Isaiah, whom we read before at the Advent, to the
beginning of Genesis, which we read you now^ all the
Septuagesima till towards Easter.
It was a question, whereof, when they were at a loss about
it here in France, Charlemaine the king here sent his letters
into England, more than eight hundred years since, for in
those days the service of the Church was wont to be a part
of the king's care, and from thence, from the Church of
England, he had his resolution given him, by one of venerable
* The third cliapter of Genesis is morning service on Sexagesima Sun-
appointed I'or the first lesson of the day.
Principle of the selection of the Sunday lessons. 207
Bcdc's scliolars'^j a man Mell known to the Avorld, a doctor of
our own CIuutIi, and tlie greatest botli for learning and
religion that all the churches of the world then had living
amongst them.
I move it the rather that you may know, first, it was no
new order this, for it was ancient even then ; so ancient, that
in this country so long ago, they w^erc to seek both for the
beginning and for the reason of it. And then to let you see
that the Church hath ordered nothing in this kind but she
is able to shew a good cause why. For the ChurcVs'^ inten-
tion is to teach us, bv the verv order and method of her
public service through the wdiole year, what her doctrine is
concerning the fundamental and necessary points of our
Christian religion through our whole lives ; and therefore
she begins her yearly office with Christ's advent, Christ's
nati\dty, and Christ's epiphany or manifestation to the world;
for that is our chief and fundamental point of all the rest.
And during all that time, she reads us the prophet Isaiah,
who speaks of Christ as if he had lived in Christ's time ; and
yet he wrote of Him six hundred'^ years before He was born,
none so clearly as he; therefore is he read then to the end
of Christ's epiphany. But when this is done, because it is no
less needful for us to take notice of that universal sin and cor-
ruption of the world, which being wrought there at first by
the suggestion of the devil, was the cause of Christ's coming
and appearing in the world, therefore ha\ing set forth the one,
begun in the New Testament, she sends us back to the other,
which was the beginning of the Old, there to reflect upon
the miserable ruin and fall of man in the first Adam, that we
might the better apprehend our own want, and look for our
repair again in the second Adam, which was Christ Himself.
For this cause are we now turned back to the beginning of
'' Reference is here made to Alcuin, panded in Cosin's note entitled, ' Ratio
the friend of Charlemagne ; but Cosin ordinis Evangeliorum de Tempore per
is in error in asserting that he was totius anni curriculum,' which occurs
educated by the venerable Beda ; see in his observations upon 'The Collects,
the life of Alcuin prefixed to the edition Epistles, and Gospels to be used.'
of his works, by Froben, vol. i. p. xvi. ^ This is considerably understated,
§ xi. ed. 1777. The letter of Alcuin for according to tlie chronology of
may be seen in the same volume, p. 85 ; archbishop Ussher, the most remark-
it was written A.D. 798. able of these prophecies were uttered
■^ See this statement more fully ex- about 712 years B.C.
208 Meaning of the lessons from Septuagesima to Easter.
s E R isr. Genesis, to tlic original cause and beginning of all sin and
'— miscliicf upon the earth ; for he that is not sent thither to
look upon his ruin, and to be rightly aftccted a\ ith it too^ in
the first Adam, will be nothing the better, the worse rather,
for the coming of the second ; that is, he that apprehends
not his sin, will never take hold of his Saviour, but have as
little sense of the one as he has of the other. And yet this
sin it is, if we look not to it, that will destroy us all; nothing
to which we have such need to be sent ; nothing from a\ Inch
we have so much need to be saved ; nothing for which Christ
came into the world to save us, but to save us from that.
As much account therefore as we make of Him and Ilis coming
into the world, so much reflection are we to make likewise
upon that sin, and from that, upon all other sins that brought
Him into the world. And this is the reason that now we
read you the book of Genesis^, where that sin is recorded,
and where you may see the first persons of the world, from
whom we all descend, banished out of paradise for it, to the
servitude and afflictions of this life. And here comes in our
Septuagesima ; whereof this Sunday is a part.
Septuagesima is a state of servitude and affliction, that the
chiefest of Adam^s posterity had seventy years together in
Babylon. When for their sin they were cast out of their own
country, it was a remembrance, that, for us, and of Adam's
l)eing cast out of God's paradise. For that ejection of his
from thence put both him, and us, into the state and con-
dition wherein now we are, the condition of a Septuagesima
servitude, that is, of captiAity and thraldom under sin and
affliction all our life long ; for so long is usually the term of
a man's life. That, and this, and the two other Sundays that
follow it, all putting of us in mind where we are, whiles we
are in our several ages, under the dominion of sin and the
mastery of Satan, to look after Christ and His coming to put
us into a better estate ; that when these daj's are done, we
may be brought out of this exile to His Easter, as it stands
here in the order of our book, w hich is His glory and resur-
rection : and so have vou a reason and an account given you of
the Church's order and disposition of her service at this time.
'-' Similar observations occur in tlie under the head ' Proper Lessons.'
Bishop's notes upontlie CommonPrayer,
Abundant proof of original corruption. 209
A part of wliich service is the text here that I liave chosen;
wherein if we can find the mercy and favonr of God in the
midst of our misery, and take heed of the malice and fraud
of the devil in the midst of His mercy, we shall have made so
many steps ])ackwards again in our way to paradise, and as
many forwards in our coming to Christ.
The fall of man and the sin of the woman in paradise,
wherewith they infected all then- posterity, is a story delivered
to us in Scripture and made good by experience. For if
there were no Scriptm-e that had recorded it, yet the
universal irregularity of our whole nature, unsampled by
other creatures, and running counter all the time of our
life to all the right rules of order and reason, besides the
wretched misery of our condition here upon the earth, where
we are daily exposed to continual afflictions and sorrow,
without any true rest or contentment of our minds at all, —
all this might well enough assure us, that ab initio non fuit
sic, ' from the beginning it was not so / at least, not likely Mat. 18. 8.
it should be so, that He who created us at first, and made us
lords of all His other creatures, should make us such dis-
orderly creatures then as we appear to be now : but that
whoever it was, there had been some common father and
parent to us all, who had, since that time, either eat or drank
some strange and devilish poison or other, wherewith, in-
fecting himself first, he undid and poisoned his whole race
after him.
That poison, to go now by the Scriptures, was brought
him by the devil, and down it went, with the breach and
contempt of God's commandment, when he would needs do
that which he was forbidden to do, and eat of a fruit which
was not permitted him to taste, being otherwise as free and
as indifferent to be eaten as any other fruit was that the
earth brought forth, but that God would make trial only in
this, whether he would be obedient to Him or no; and he would
not; would be kept under no restraint or law at all, but would
needs be lord himself, and do what he list; this undid him,
and all his posterity after him ; for such as the nature of the
root is, infected or sound, such are the branches that flow
from it. And we are branches of his infected stock, every
man and mother's child of us all, till we be all ingrafted into
COSIN. -D
210 Division of the subject into its parts.
s E R M. Clu'ist ; all poisoned with sin, and tliat sin wliich was the
XV
— bane of the world, the sin of disobedience to God^s express
will and commandment ; take Ave heed of that sin, it undid
and disordered the world at first, that, and first or last will
be the banc and undoing of us all.
They take then* freedom much abroad, to talk and dis-
course of the fruit of this tree ; they bid us tell them what it
was ; and many a loose tongue there is that say then' pleasiu'e
of it. But it is neither the fruit nor the tree that we are to
look at here. Be it what it was, good we are sure it was, as
Gen. 1. 31. all the rest were; all tliat God had made was good, and good
to be eaten too ; there was no harm in the tree at all ; the
harm was in the breach of God's commandment, which
might have forbidden the use of any other tree, or any other
indifferent thing whatsoever, as well as this. And if the
commandment had been broken, the offence had been the
same still, lay it where they will ; so the offence is all.
For which Adam being called to an account, and he laying
the fault upon the woman, the woman is here examined, and
gives in her answer, of both which we are now to take a view.
' And the Lord God said unto the woman. What is this that
thou hast done ? And the woman said. The serpent beguiled
me.'
There are three parties here named, and we must take
notice of them all ; but the general parts of the text are two ;
God's own inquisition, accusing the woman; and the woman's
own confession, excusing her fact.
I begin with the inquisition into the fact ; ' And the Lord
God said unto the woman. What is this that thou hast done?'
where we have the person first that makes this inquest, and
then the inquisition itself. We will look into them both.
I. In the person ; as much offended as He was, yet there
are here three remarkable cii'cumstances of His goodness.
First, in His forbearance to stay so long as He did, not to
come and examine, or call this woman to an account, till now.
Et dixit Dominus, 'And the Lord God said.' That 'And' is
often set for a conjuuction of time, and so it is here ; for
first, the man himself had been examined, and till he accused
and appealed the woman, God, He forbears her; AVho,
though He needed not any information from another to tell
Accumulated sin of Eve. 211
Him what had been done, for He knew well, and liad observed
all the progress of her sin from the first to the last, yet as
though He had been loath to know it, or to find her guilty
of it. He takes no notice of it all the while, but as if lie had
been unwilling to come against her, and to pronounce any
such sentence of justice upon her as her sin required. See
how long He stays from it, and how slowly He comes to it ;
she whom He kncAV to be the first in the transgression. He
sets her by, here to be the last in the inquisition ; she who
had committed so many transgressions. He calls her not into
question for any of them all till now. Count her trans-
gressions; for there were more of them than one. (1.) She
had entertained a conference here with the devil, listened to
him; and yet God spared her. (2.) At the first onset of that
conference she sinned a sin of unbelief and distrust in God,
made a question whether He had said true or no ; and yet
He spared her. (3.) In the progress of her sin she grew
ambitious and exalted in her mind, to become like God Him-
self; and yet He spared her. (4.) In the pm'suit of this am-
bition she assents, and suffers the devil to charge God with
envy, says nothing against it; and yet He spared her.
(5.) After this she lets her sensual desires and affections all
loose to be doing that which God had forbidden her ; and yet
He spared her. (6.) At last she does it, comes to the height
and consummation of her sin; that is, sins all these sins
together, of pride and ambition, of murmuring and envy, of
distrust and unbelief, of presumption and confidence, of
rebellion and disobedience, all this. And yet for all this,
God He forbears her still, comes not against her all this
while, till she had allm-ed the man also into all these trans-
gressions with her; and then, and not till then, does He
come here to judge and punish them both. Well may we
say of Him, ' Long suffering and of great goodness,^ for He
comes not to judge and punish until He be provoked and
forced to come, as if it were against His nature and property
to do it ; never does it, no more now, than He did here at
first, till the world puts Him to it, and will suffer Him to
stay no longer.
This is one good meditation for us to begin withal ; and
this may be another, that though we find our hearts full of
p 2
212 All temptation not sin.
s E R M. evil and sinful thoughts, -which she, here in the state of her
XV ...
-' — integrity, might have kept from ever coming there, as in the
state of our corruption we never shall, though we be often
tempted with them and meet with many allurements to make
us sin, yet if we can make any shift to keep ourselves from
the act and execution of sin, we have a fair hope here, that
God will bear no less with us than He did with her, till she
brought all to a final execution, and let her sins get the
mastery of her in the end. For He will not deal with us in
further rigour than the frailties and infirmities of oiu' human
nature, now corrupted and made worse than it was, will
bear. There is a soil of sin contracted in us, ever since this
first sin was committed, which of itself mil otherwhiles rise
and vapour from our nature, let the best do his best. I do
not say Ave can keep ourselves now from that, as Eve might
have done before her fall ; but this we may do, we may keep
ourselves from provoking that corruption, by not suffering
our minds to wander in it ; by keeping our ears from such
conference, and our eyes from such occasions, as will set it a
working, all which was the undoing of this Avomau at first.
From that, by the help of God, we may keep om-selves well
enough. And thus, if sin be not kept from us, because of
the many infirmities that are within us, and the many temp-
tations that be Avithout us, yet are we kept fr^om sin, by
suffering neither of them both to get the dominion and
mastery over us. And Avith that Avill God be content at our
hands, as our estate now is. This is a point of comfort in
the midst of our misery, and all this belongs to His long-
suffering and forbearance here ; the first circumstance in the
person of the judge.
2. The second is in the temper of His justice, — which I
consider not here in relation to the promise that He made
hereafter of setting up the brazen serpent, that was Christ,
to heal them and all others, of the sting and poison Avhich
they had got from this tempting serpent, — but, as the text
here leads me, and no fui'ther. In that, God vouchsafes,
first, to enquire of the offence, and to examine the fact, be-
fore He giA'es any sentence, or proceeds to execution upon it.
Geii. 11.7. He did so at Babel, went down to see their building first,
before He Avould confound those builders. He did so at
Gud examines before He condeinns. 213
Sodom, before He burnt up their city. He will do so again Gen. is.
when He comes to burn up all the world ; all sliall be ex- '^ ■
amiiied and every one shall be heard, what they can say for
themselves before they receive their sentence. We say of
Him, and we say rightly, that from Him no secrets are hid, Ps. 41. 21.
but all hearts open, and all actions known to Him, whatever iCor.3.21.
they be, for He framed the heart, and understandeth the ^ ^^'"- '^•^•
thoughts of them long before ; He created the world, and
sees all the Avorks that are done in it. This enquiry, therefore,
was not, nor never will be, because He knew not what was
done, but that these persons that did it might reflect upon
themselves and see what evil they had done. If justice pro-
ceeds it is long of them^ that they have nothing left to 'it is their
plead against it; otherwise as He is wilHng to hear them
all they can say, so He is unAvilling to condemn them before
they be heard and have said here what they can : which
will be the case likewise of all their posterity that comes
after them.
3. The third and last circumstance which I note here, is,
that God is said here to come in His own person, and make
this enquiry ; to speak and to talk with them, as one man
doth with another ; to come down and look them out, when
they ran away from Him and hid themselves out of His
sight. All which is spoken secundum captiim humanum, that
men might the more easily apprehend and understand His
ways of proceeding with them the better^ It is an adage of
the Hebrew Avriters, and they repeat it often. Lex loquitur
linguam filiorum hominum, ^ that God speaks the language of
men;^ that is, that the Scriptures of God descend to the
capacity and understanding of men, and therefore they pre-
sent God and shew Him to us, not only in the faculties of
our mind, but in the position, and motion, and lineaments of
our body. In the meanwhile this is certain, that His im-
mutable and divine nature is not subject to any one of them
all, howsoever here or elsewhere He presenteth Himself in
them. I add that as it is not proper for His essence, so
neither is it fitting for His greatness, thus to express Him-
self; but that He, not regarding so much what might best
become Him, as what might best instruct us, chooseth of
f See TcrtuU. adv. Piaxean, p. 503. eel. 1597.
214 Nature of the trial to wJuch
S E R M. purpose tlic stylat and cliaractcr for us wherewith we are
'- — soonest affected.
And because good moral counsel, dehvered in plain and
general precepts, use to enter but faintly with us, therefore
ad exaggerandam peccati vim et maliiiam, as TertuUian speaks,
to set forth the heinousness of sin, and contempt against
Him, He sets forth Himself affected with it, as in the like
case we would be affected oui'selves, able to bring Him out
of His place, to fetch Him down from heaven, if by any
means in the world it were possible to bring Him thence.
Such is the nature of sin, that it would even force Him to
that.
But St. Austin's reason is better, and more commended,
Exprimit in Se, ut expromat dc te. He thus brings forth
Himself against sin, examining, complaining, condemning,
judging, and punishing of it, that Ave might do as much
against it in ourselves. And so I come from the person to
the inquisition.
II. And He said, Quid est hoc quod fecisii ? ' ^Miat is this
that thou hast done?' whereof I have said so much already,
that I shall have but a little to do here.
There is in it the greatness and aggravation of her sin,
this first sin of the world, that hath so disordered the world
ever since, and brought in all the rest after it.
And the greatness of it, how little account soever the
Pelagian^, the Socinian^, and the Atheist' make of it, will
appear to us in these three particulars.
1 . First, it was a transgression of a law, and such a law as
was given for nothing else, but only to try and to prove the
first man and the first woman, (of whom aU men and women
were afterwards to come,) whether they would live here in
subjection to God or no, and acknowledge Him to be their
Lord and master; or otherwise to renounce Him and His
absolute dominion over them.
For the moral law which Avas written and engraven in
their hearts, as it is still in ours, — that was not it ; it Avas
s Sco Vossius, IlistoiiaPelagianismi, ' See tlieir opinion suinnicd up l)y
p. 172. edit. 1018. Gerhftid, Loc. Thcol. iv. ,317. edit.
'■ Scherzer, Collrg. Aiiti-Socin., p. Cottae.
275. edit. 1672.
Adam and Eve were subjected in paradise. 215
not for the doing of any tiling tlmt was of itself simply good,
nor for tlie abstaining from any thing that was of itself
simply evil, for in such things as these, in the state of
integrity -wherein they were created, there had been no trial
of their pure and absolute subjection at all, and therefore
there was no commandment given them for these things at
first, no more than there is now to the Angels; such excellent
endowments they had then, without any disorder in their
aficctions, or defect in their intellectuals, that they were
naturally carried to observe all moral laws of themselves,
that is, such things as a good and righteous person Avould do,
without any commandment to do them, and such things as
he would not do, without any prohibition to forbid them ; so
this was not it that put them to their trial. That which did
so, was a law of another nature, prohibiting a thing in itself
neither good nor evil ; a thing, that but for the trial of their
obedience (whether they would submit themselves to God
or no, only because He commanded them, and merely for
obedience sake) had been other'^\dse indifferent, and neither
pleasing nor displeasing to God at all. Perad venture this is
somewhat that ye have not heard before, but we had it from
St. Austin, and he had it from the Citv of God, where the
Scriptui'es and the Church of God are kept : Prohibita non
propter aViiid, qiiam ad commendandum puree ac simpticis obe-
dientice bonum, ' Being,' says he there, ' forbidden not for any
other respect than thereby only to try and commend their
pure and simple obedience ;' for by observing of this law,
they should have given a testimony that they were willing
to subject themselves to God's pleasure, only because it was
His pleasure ; and therefore by rejecting and breaking this
law, they did as much as make an open profession that they
would be none of His subjects, but renounce His power and
lordship over them. This was their sin, and this the first
was that wherein the greatness of their sin appeared the
greater, because they had no other commandment given
them than this.
2. The second is, in regard of then* persons that sinned.
That they here, whom God had made the last and most ex-
cellent of all His creatiu^es, formed them after His own
image, given them an essence both spiritual and immortal.
216 Original righteousness of man.
S E II M. endued tliem with qualities divine and holy, bestowed on
— ^^ — them a free and unconstrained will, made them lords and
rulers of all the world besides, — that they here should sin
against Him, and set so light by His pleasure ; the greater
the persons, the greater the sin; and the more graces, the
more ingratitude. For of those to Avhom God had given so
much. He might justly have required and expected much;
whatsoever it had been that He imposed upon them. If
they sin, they sin more grievously than any other ; so that
in this respect the sin of these two persons, adorned with so
many divine and admirable abilities not to sin at all, exceeded
the sins of all then* posterity, as much as their integrity did
our corruption : between which there is now as great a differ-
ence as betwixt the light of the sun, and the darkness of a
cloud. This was a second aggravation.
3. The third is as great, for the commandment was little,
and easy to be observed ; easy, both in regard of themselves,
who being created in holiness and righteousness, were not
then troubled with any such disordered affections as Ave are
now, and in regard of that which was forbidden them. For
they had all the liberty of the world allowed them, but this ;
whereof, as they had no need, in the full plenty and abund-
ance of all things else, so had they no prohibition neither,
but only to approve themselves in this one particular, that
not^vithstanding their Hberty and lordship over all other
creatures, there was yet a lord and master over them. Whom
they should have no liberty to reject. And yet they did it
when they had no provocation, no reason at all to do it ; did
it for no other but because they Avould have their own will in
doing of it, without enduring the least restraint to be put
upon them ; which made their sin rise as high as pride and
rebellion, the worst sins, and the most like the devil's sin of
any other. Well might God say. Quid est hoc quod fecisti ?
'What is this that thou hast done?' AU considered, there
never was the like. Pride and rebellion make men like to
devils, and the devil has a foot in it, wherever the steps of it
are now, or have been at any time to be found. For here
in the next part is he brought in as the master rebel of aU
himself.
'And the woman said, The serpent beguiled me.' Of
Different opinions respecting the serpent. 217
which there is so much to say, that I must ask leave for
another time to say it in, and only tell you noAV, the heads of
Avhat I am to speak of then.
There is in it, besides the woman and that which concerns
her, the serpent and his guile, that concerns both him and
ourselves.
Concerning the serpent, there will be two things to be
enquired ; first, what this serpent was indeed ; and secondly,
what Eve supposed him to be. For there are some men in
the world so unreasonable, as to think and to say that this
was the unreasonable and the brute serpent '^, and others
there be that make nothing of it but a mere allegory', such
another as they do of the tree of life too. So volatile and
slippery are the licentious wits and fancies of men, that
neither Scripture nor any religious writer besides can fix
them. Against these two sorts of men, and the imaginary
doctrine that they have delivered to the world, we shall have
somewhat to say and make it appear first, that tliis deceiver
here was the devil, who did but abuse the brute serpent,
either by entering into him, or by taking his shape upon
him, and then that Eve took him for no other. There will
be some difficulties to assoil ', but I shall endeavour to clear ' to answer
them all, and shew you besides, what his liberty and what his
limits have been ever since.
Concerning his guile, here, when we know how the woman,
the wisest and the most knowing that ever was, came to be
beguiled by him, we shall take occasion to tell you what has
'' This was the opinion of Josephus, toplastis colloquente eosque vestiente,
(Antiq. Jud. i. 1,) and of various other de arbore vitae et discriminis boni
..Jewish writers; see Biiddei Hist. Eccl. malique Jehovse et coelitibus reservata,
Vet. Testament!, torn. i. p. 96. edit. 172(}. de serpente callidis verbis alliciente,
' A list of tliese allegorists, begin- de pcsnis serpenti et hominibus inflictis
ning with Philo and Origen, together ob delictum levissinium gravissimis,
with a refutation of their theory, may quse potius pro eftectis e natura crea-
be seen in Cotta's note to Gerhard's Loc. turarum illarum finita necessario exo-
Com. Theolog., torn. iv. p. 301. The fol- riundis habendas sunt, quod similia
lowing passage from Wegschneider's aliarum gentium commenta peperit,
Institutiones Theologise Christians originemmaliexplicare tentavit. Verum
Dogmaticae, § 117, (HaliB 1829,) will e mytho sacro nulla ejusmodi dogmata
best explain the sentiments of the in verae religionis doctrinam recipienda
modern German school. In traditio- sunt, nisi quse non pugnant cum idea
nis Mosaicae argumento fons est prse- numinis et cum naturae humanae indole
cipuus doctrina de origine peccati. morali, quales e Scripturee Sacrse effatis
Sed id ipsum, et ea prsesertim aperte indubitatis et sanae rationi convenienti-
mythum produnt, quse narrantur de bus recte demonstrata; fuerint.
Deo apparente, ambulante, cum pro-
218 Practical lessons to be derived
S EH M. been the greatest occasion, ever since that time, of the
'- — greatest errors and disorders of the world in all times ; for
there is a piece of the devil's deceit and guile in them all,
moral and religions matters and all. All to make us the
more careful and wary against him, to know what the deceit-
fulness of sin and error is, and to avoid it, to fly from it as
Eccl.21.2. we Avould do from a serpent; for to this end was this Scrip-
ture recorded by God, and appointed to-daj^ to be read in His
Church, whereof God give us grace to make a right and a
religious use, that if we have not been so happy as not to
fall, (we call Adam's sin Adam's fall,) yet we may not be so
unhappy as not to rise and stand up again ; if not before we
sin to stop ourselves, and say, Quid est hoc quod facio, what
is this that I am about to do ? which were always best, yet
at least to say after, Quid est hoc quod feci, what is this that
I have done? which will never be amiss. There is much more
in it (this, 'what have we done?') than one Avould think, for
ask it over again, when at any time we fall, (for sin, as we
said, is the fall of man,) it casts us down as a fall, it bruises
as a fall, it fouls as a fall, dixit Dominus, Quid est hoc quod
fecisti ? 'what is this that thou hast done?'' what in respect
of itself? so fond, so foul, so ignominious an act; — what in
regard of God? so opposite to the laAv of His justice, so
injurious to the awe of His power, so fearful, so glorious in
His majesty ; — what in regard of the object ? for what a
trifling vanity ! for what a transitory pleasure ! what in
respect of the consequent, so dangerous, so pernicious to
soul and body both, and yet for all this, to be so e^il adnsed
as to do it ; why did we do it ? how came we to be brought
to it ? sure when we did it, we did we knew not what. A
meditation as fit for any one's sin and falling from God in
other kinds, as it was for Eve's here in this.
Therefore the best use and application of all will be to ask
ourselves this question; to ask it often; to recount our falls;
that is, to call ourselves to an account for them, before God
comes to do it ; to set them before us, as He does here before
Eve ; to look upon them and to see whether they have
brought us from the state of paradise to the turmoils of the
world, from the beauty of life to the dust of death, from the
place of liberty to the bar of judgment. If we could be
from the whole subject. 219
sometimes got to do this in kind, we vrould keep ourselves
the better from falling out of God's protection, so often as we
do ; but if at any time we find ourselves out, it wiU be good
making all the haste we can to get in again howsoever. And
there is no better way to do it than this, that God Himself
hath here set out for us ; that is, to call ourselves to account
for sin, before He comes to judgment.
And this being the sum of all, here I end, praying that
God would give us grace, first to avoid sin, and then, if we
have not avoided it, to follow the advice which this sermon
and this lesson of His hath given us. And to the same God,
as our bounden duty is, let us always ascribe all honour, and
glor}', and dominion over all His creatures, now and for ever-
more. Amen.
SERMON XVI.
PARIS, MARCH 5, 1651. [new STTLE.]
SECUNDA DOMINICA QUADRAGESIM/E.
Genesis iii. 13, 14.
And the Lord God said unto the looman, JVhat is this that
thou hast done 7 And the woman said, The serpent beguiled
me and I did eat.
And the Lord God said unto the serpent, Because thou hast done
this, thou art cursed, ^c.
s E R T^.l. I RETURN now to our text here out of Genesis, wliicli tlie
— '- — Church at this season reads to us, and where the story of
Adam^s fall, and the beginning of sin and misery in the
world, is recorded to all his posterity.
A story, whereof if there were no Scripture nor record at
all, yet would the general corruption and irregularity of our
Mat. IP. 8. whole nature, give us cause enough to suspect that ab initio
non fuit sic, from the beginning it was not as it is now, but
that some or other, of whom we all came, themselves had
first poisoned, and then infected all their whole race after
them.
As here in Genesis we read of the forbidden meat, so in
1 Cor. 10. St. Paul we find that there was a forbidden cup, calix dcemo-
niorum, that the devil hath a cup. Of that cup it is that,
after Adam, the world will still be tasting; and as it went
down sweetly with him, but poisoned him, so sin is a poison
Gen. 3. 5. to all the world besides, and a poison to death. Eritis sicut
dii went off pleasantly at first, but it was bitter in the bottom,
2 Kiu[,'s 1. and it proved his bane. Mors in olla, there was destruction
in that meat, and death in that cup ; by which is meant the
deadly fruit of our deadly sins, the punishment and sentence
that here follows them-.
Analysis of the sin of Adam and Eve. 221
For the recemng of which sentence, Adam being called
first into question by the great Judge of heaven and earth,
and he laying the fault upon the woman, she upon the
serpent, the doom here passes upon them all. But first she
was heard to say, as Adam was before her, all that she can
allege or answer for herself.
When I took this text first, I made but two parts of it in
the former case, and now I add a third in the latter. Let
them be altogether, the inquisition into the fact, the con-
fession of the party, and the sentence of the judge. Of the
inquisition we began to speak when I made the last sermon.
Of that which remains there, and of the confession, we shall
speak in this ; and of the sentence hereafter. Of which, &c.
Into the inquisition, consisting of the words. And the
Lord God said unto the woman, Wliat is this that thou hast
done ? we have begun to enquire already ; and now we get
on to see how great a sin it was that was here committed,
because the world usually make so light of it. And yet it
concerns them more than all the world besides.
(1.) The greatness of it will appear in regard, first, of the
commandment itself, which was given them that rejected it
for no other end but to prove them only, whether they would
live here in subjection to God, or no ; for otherwise it was of
a thing indifferent in itself, neither good nor evil, neither
pleasing nor displeasing to God at all, but to try their obedi-
ence, for obedience sake. And therefore, as by observing it,
they should have given a testimony that they were Avilling to
submit themselves to God's pleasui-e, only because it was
His pleasure ; so by rejecting it, they acknowledged no
absolute power or dominion at all which He had over them
That had created and made them. This made it a sin of pride
and rebelhon, the worst sin and the most Hke the devil's sin
of any other.
(2.) Next, in regard of their own person that committed it;
that they here, upon whom God had bestowed so much,
formed them after His own image, adorned them with such
excellent abilities, made them lords over all His other
creatures, allowed them the choice of all the things in the
whole world but one, and given them a free and uncon-
223 Magnitude of the sin of Adam and Eve.
S E R M. strained will, besides a power not to have sinned at all ; —
— "^^ • that they, thus plentifully furnished against sin, should yet
sin against Him, and set so Hght by His pleasure ! for the
greater the persons, the greater the sin ; and the more graces
the more ingratitude. If they sin, they sin more grievously
than any other ; so that in this respect, their sin exceeded
the sins of all their posterity, as much as their state of
integrity does our state of corruption. This made it an un-
gi'ateful sin.
(3.) And thirdly, in regard of the petty and irrational
motives that thev had to do it : that God emied them ; that
it might be He had not said true ; that the devil knew more
than He; and that because the de\-il said it, and said he
would put them into a better state, and do more for them
than He, then- Lord and Maker had done. AVherein they
did not only set themselves to try a conclusion with God
Himself, whether He could see them so sin, or be affected
with such a sin, or cared to punish a sin, which, wheresoever
such a contempt and tempting of Him is, amounts to very
near as much as to doubt whether there be a God or no ;
but they surrendered up themselves likewise to His enemies,
and adhered to the devil after. This made it a treacherous
sin.
(4.) And lastly, all this dehberately, in a full conference
entertained and had with the devil about it; after a con-
fession that God had been with them before and forbidden
them ; after an acknowledgment that they had all the liberty
of the world besides ; and yet they did it Avhen they had no
provocation, no reason, no need to do it. This made it a
wilful sin.
And all this put together ; the sin of pride and ambition
in themselves, of distrust and murmui'ing against God, of
ingratitude to His bounty, of presumption against His will,
and of a wilful rebellion against His express commandment,
together with a treacherous adhering to His professed enemy;
all this makes it the greatest sin that ever was, the sin that
hath so disordered the world with all manner of other sins
ever since ^.
" The nature and progressive cliarac- Aquinas, 2. 2. q. 1C3, art. i.
ter of Eve's sin is well discussed by
God is a rif/hteousjudye. 223
All which I have urged the rather^ and now more than I
did before, to confirm and make good the tenor of the Scrip-
ture, and the truth of this point, against them that in tliis
point especially, — in many others, but in this above others —
suffer their fancies and their tongues to run so loosely against
it. I do not imagine that there be any such among us, but
we may meet with them now and then abroad, and it is not
amiss that we should be always prepared for them.
I have but one thing more to add to this first part, and
then I shall proceed to the second.
God is here brought in, as in some other places of the
Scriptui'e, in the person of a judge, enquiring after the fact,
examining the party, and censuring the crime. So He pro-
ceeds here secundum allegata et probata, gives no sentence,
gives neither reward nor punishment without a proof or an
evidence fu'st had for either.
First then, God proposes to Himself persons that are
obsequious to His grace, and husband His grace well Avhile
they have it, and then He will reward with more grace ; if
they neglect it, if they use it ill, then He will punish, and
take away that grace from them which they had before. But
neither this nor that without His evidence either for them or
against them.
For this purpose we are to take the saying of the Scripture
either way; that as it is His delight to be with the sons of Prov.s.si.
men, so it is His intent to see what they do, and to proceed Gen. ii. 7.
according to their doings. There are that in these matters
refer to His hidden and eternal decrees only, and will have
all His proceedings to be that way, in scrinio pecto?'is ; to
give judgment before any act be done, good or bad; to award
a man punishment before he commits any sin. He did not
so here ; and if that other were a right and just proceeding,
then might the day of judgment be past already, and this
inquisition here might have been spared. But I do not see
how either justice, or reward, or punishment, can stand with
that opinion^.
•> We must not forget that when pounder well denominated it, was
Cosin wrote, that peculiar doctrine of preached in all its nakedness, and its
Calvin which is generally styled the advocates did not shrink, as they now
doctrine of Irrespective Decrees, — do, from avowing the consequences
'horribile illud decretum,' as its pro- which naturally resulted from it. A few
224 The decrees of God not irrespective.
s E R M. Abscondita Deo nostro. The decrees of God are hid with
^^^- God ; if they be secret, we neither know them, nor are we to
know them. This we know, and are all tied to take notice
of it, that revelata nobis, those things of God which lie hath
revealed to men, those only are for us to know ; and to know
thus much besides, that lie does not use to reveal one thing,
nor to do any thing, and mean another. As He did here at
first, so He wiU be sure to do ever after ; to be no accepter
or condemnor of persons, as they are persons, but as they ai'e
persons well or ill disposed, and qualified by well or iU using
the grace that He has given them. Other rule than this
have we none to follow, nor did He follow here any other
Himself, where He proceeds enquiring and examining and
clearing the matter of fact before He sits down to give any
sentence about it. Never shall any be able to say to Him
Gen. 18. otherwise than Abraham said to Him, ShaU not the judge of
^^" aU the earth do right ? According to the evidence of om- own
actions, so will He do.
Gen. 19. 1. God Sent down His commissioners, the Angels, to Sodom,
to enquire and inform Him how things went there. God
comes down Himself here, to enquire and to know how it
stood with Adam and Eve; not that He needed any informa-
tion about them, or that He ever was, or ever can be, ignorant
of any thing, either concerning them or us ; for He knew
well enough and had narrowly observed all the progress of
their sin, as daily He does any of ours ; but that He would
prevent, both in them, and in every man of the world after
them, that dangerous and unjust imagination, when they find
themselves fallen into sin or misery, that God should first
purpose to destroy a man, and then make him that He might
destroy him, without having any other e\adence against him.
Gen. 1.27. For God made man ad imaginem suam, after His own
image. If He had made him inevitably to be cast away and
lost. He had made him ad imaginem diaboli, after the image
of the devil, who was then lost and cast out of heaven. But
God goes not out as a fowler, to kill for His pleasm'C. It is
1 Pet. 5. 8. not He tliat seeks whom He may devoui'. He seeks whom He
Lu.i9. 10. j^j^y ^QXQ, and is willing to save them, though He saves no
of these are noticed by Cosin in this that they shouUl be brought promi-
place, but tlie subject did not require nently forward.
God not the author of man^s destruction. 225
man against his Avill ; and when He proceeds to condemn any
man, as liei*e lie did the first. He proposes not that man to
Himself, either as He meant to make him, nor as He did
make him, for He made him not sinful, but as by his sins he
hath made and marred himself.
And therefore God does not sav, here before, alicui morte
moriendum, that somebody must die, and thereupon made
somebody to be killed ; but said only, morte morieris, you
are yet alive, and may live still, but if you Mill not obey Me,
then morte moriendum indeed, the wages of that sin will be Roni.fi.23.
death. So God did not at first make death, nor made He
sickness, nor famine, nor pestilence, nor war, and then make
man, that He might throw him into their mouths; but when
man had thrown down himself into the danger and dominion
of them, as it was told him before he should, if he sinned, Gen. 2. 17.
thereupon God let him indeed fall into their mouths, and
that was all. And this to free God from being the fii'st author
of any man^s destruction. For no man can wish himself
better than God intended him at first before the fall; no,
nor than God intends him now, as great a sinner as he is after
the fall, if but yet he will conform himself to His will, before
He comes to enquire after him and give sentence upon him.
And so much for the inquisition that God made here after
this sin, and the reason why He made it, when He said,
* What is this that thou hast done ?^
II. I come now to the confession, and the answer that the
woman made for herself, when she said, ' The serpent beguiled
me, and I did eat.'
In which answer we shall have some questions to resolve.
First, concerning the truth of it, whether it were a real thing
or no, that here she confesseth; for there are that would
have nothing made of it, but a matter merely allegorical, of
the serpent's beguiling, and of Eve's eating, and all.
Second, then concerning this serpent, what he Avas indeed.
And thirdly, what Eve supposed and took him to be.
Afterwards w^e are to say somewhat of the beguiling here,
and the person upon whom that beguiling wrought. But I
shall not reach these two last to-day.
(1.) And first therefore, for the truth of this story. The
text is clear enough, both here and before, that there was a
COSIN. Q
226 TJie Scripture emplorjs meta'phorical language.
S E R M. tree, a forhitlden tree, "vvliereof this woman did really eat ;
— * — 1- and that there was a serpent, a deceiving serpent, by whom
she was really beguiled. "Whereof religious and good men
make no doubt ; others do ; the licentious wits of some men
being so volatile and slippery, that no Scriptures, no truth,
can fix them. And such men have herein deHvered to the
world an imaginary doctrine of their own, that both tree, and
serpent, and paradise, and all, were nothing, and both mere
allegories <^ j Avhich came first either from the fancy of the
heathen poets, whom they read rather than the Scriptures,
or from Julian'^ the apostate and his master. Porphyry, whom
in this case they are Avilling to follow.
Indeed the poets feigned, and they feigned not amiss, that
men were transformed into divers shapes of beasts ; thereby
allegorically to shew the change of some men's conditions,
from reason to brutalitv, and from virtue to vice. And as
by the lively image of other creatures those ancients did
represent the variable passions and affections of mortal men,
so did the writers of the Scripture too, otherwhilcs, from
whom those heathens had their copy. An oppressor and a
cruel man was made a lion ; there is as much in the Psalm,
Ps. 57. 4. My soul is among lions ; men given to lust and sensuality
were represented by a swine, there is as much in St. Peter,
2 Pet. 2. of one that wallows in the mii'e ; a ravening and a greedy
^^- man was made a Avolf, there is as much mentioned in the
Mat. 10. gospel, I send you forth as sheep among wolves ; foolish and
^^- ignorant persons were set forth by an image, the images of
stocks and stones; they are so in the Scriptures, They that
Ps. 135. make them are like unto them, and so are all they that put
^'^^ their trust in them. But the subtle and deceitful person is
made a serpent, all by a metaphorical resemblance only, as
they would have it here. So they say of the tree of know-
ledge, and of paradise itself; from whence the heathen poets
fetched their garden of Ilesperides and their tree of nectar ®.
' See S. CjTill. Alexaiulri 0pp., torn. among tlie later theologians; andRosen-
vi. p. 82. ed. Auberti, Lut. KkJS. niuller and Wegsclicider among tlie
'' Of these it maybe enough to specify Germans.
Origen among tlie ancients, concerning " Tliis is derived from Percrius in
whom see iluet. Origen, lib. ii. q. 12. Genes., where he discusses the question,
§ 7. torn. i. p. 107. cd. 1C68; Cajetan 'An sapientes gentilium ullam arboris
(see Pereriiis in Genes., lib. iv. cap. 10. vit:e uotitiam habuerint ? ' tom. i. p.
q. 11. tom. i. p. 153. ed. Colon. 1(J22.) 102. Colon. 1622.
The histonj of the fall literally true. 237
But as all those resemblances were no true stories^ so this
story here was no feigned resemblance. Allegories tlierc
are in Scripture and elsewhere^ grounded upon real verities,
and fetched from the truth of a story itself; yet as tliat
hinders not but that the story may be true, so it does not
turn the story itself into an allegory, nor the truth into a
fiction j for since the one doth not exclude the other, they
may both stand together.
For Avhich purpose I will turn them to another piece of
Scripture. St. Paul in his epistle to the Galatians, speaks Gal. 4. 2L
of Agar and Sarah, and makes an allegory, or, because you
may all understand me, a figure and a resemblance of them
both ; says that they signified the Old and the New Testa-
ments ; and that all this was spoken by an allegory. Yet to
conclude from hence that they were nothiug but an allegory,
and to think they were not tliercfore two women, one the
maid, and the other the wife of Abraham, were nothing
else but folly. So it is in this place, where the words and
the sense of the Scripture is manifest that such an earthly
paradise there was, such a tree planted in the midst of that
paradise, such a serpent persuading the woman to eat of that
tree, and all real ; called therefore the tree of knowledge of
good and evil, not for any innate quality that it had of
itself, to beget any such knowledge in them which they had
not before, for they knew well enough how evil it was to
break God^s commandment, but to give them an experi-
mental knowledge only ^, v>^hich they were like to find, if
they brake that commandment, by the event and punish-
ment that would follow upon it ; as in the like case we say
ourselves, they shall be made to know it now, of those that
would not know it when they did, and took no warning be-
fore. For otherwise, Adam was of perfect knowledge, and
coiild not be ignorant but that the disobeying of God's
commandment was the fearfullest evil, and the observing of
it the greatest good, that could ever befal him. But as men
in perfect health know that sickness is grievous, and yet
they feel it not till by experience they find it so, so was it
with Adam and his tree of knowledge ; which some men,
f See Pererius in Genes., torn. i. p. litteram, lib. viii. cap. 13.
141, and also S. August, de Genesi ad
q2
228 Who the serpent was
S E R M. not rightly understanding vi\\\ it was so called, have tliouglit
L- to be no material tree at all. Tliev rai^lit as well have said
it was no well at all, the well of strife, wliich the herdsmen
Gen. 26. of Israel and Gerar contended, for; nor no waters at all,
Niiin ''o '^^^ waters of strife, which the children of Israel contended
1-3. for : for the waters had no such innate quality in them, to
make any strife, and yet they were material and real waters
still for all that ; they were more than a metaphor. So was
this tree of knowledge.
(2.) This then being set right, we come to the serpent
here, to see what he was.
First, it was a serpent that could speak, for he held con-
ference here with Eve a good while together ; and then he
gave her divers reasons, such as they were, to allure and
persuade her to his purpose. Therefore it Avas none of the
unreasonable and brute serpent itself, as Julian and his
p. 236. disciples, pleading against St. Cj^ril and his Chiu'ch at Alex-
andi'ia ^, said it was, if it were any thing, for that serpent had
no language to speak withal, neither he nor any other beast
of the field besides ; and though some men have been so
free and so fond of their fancies, as to think they had all a
language at first ^, we read of them in the parva Genesis^, a
legend, and in Josephus's-" Antiquities, yet no man ever said
that they could speak the language of Eve; and how then could
he confer with her? as this serpent did, or from whence could
he know what commandment God had laid upon her and
her husband ? as this serpent also did. Besides, the natural
Gail. 1.31. serpent was at first a good creature of God, all was good that
He made, and there was no evil in them. But this serpent
that spake to Eve was altogether against goodness, and
^ S.Cyrill. Alexand. adv. Julian., lib. ' See Fabricius Codex Pseudepigr.
iii. torn. vi. p. 82. edit. Lut. 1(J3S. Veteris Testam., toin. i. p. 819. edit.
^ 'Ofj.o'pwvovvTwvSi Kar' iKiivo KOLipov Hantb. 1713.
tSiv ^(uwv airavTUiv, 6 ucfus avuSiaiTw- > Secundum, qusenam fuerit vox
/j-fvos Tqi T€ 'ASafiifi Kol ry yvvatK], ilia seipentis, quce sermociiiatio ? Nam
(pdovepws /j.€V elx^'' ^'P' ois avrohs ev- vulgus credit, ut fabulis teritur, in
Sai/xovfiaeiv uhto, -rreTreiffixevovs to7s ipso mundi exordio non homines tan-
ToG Qeov ■Kapa.yylKjxacriv. Jose))li. tuni sed et omnia prorsus animantia
Antiq. .Tud., lib. i. cap. 2. § 4. Opp., loqui et sermocinari consucvisse ; quod
torn. i. p. 6. edit. Oxon. 1720. See quidem vanum et ridiculum est.
Tostatus in Genes, quisest. 439. and Fcinand. in Gen., tom. i. col. 241.
Pererius, tom. i. p. 192. St. Basil See also some further speculations of
appears to have entertained the same the same nature mentioned by Euseb.
opinion. de Prwpar. Evang., lib. xii. cap. 9.
by whom Eve was tempted. 229
seduces her to evil. Last of all, the punislimcnt here
inflicted upon the serpent, though part of the former part
might belong to the unreasonable serpent, yet the latter part
of it could not : the reason whereof I shall shcAV you when I
come to that vei'se hereafter.
It remains therefore that it must be some other serpent
besides him; and so it was. It was that old serpent the Kcv. 12. <).
devil, as the Scriptures every where style him, that took
either the body or the shape of the other serpent upon him^
and therein came thus to speak and thus to persuade and
beguile the Avoman here as he did.
And that thus it was, the Scriptures are clear; where
the Prophets and Apostles, whenever they have occasion to
speak of the first coming in of sin and death into the world,
they ascribe it to him. In the Old Testament ; For God Wis. 2. 23.
created man to be immortal, saith Solomon, and made him
to be an image of His own eternity ; but through the envy
of the devil came death into the world. In the New ; The Joii. 8. 4k
devil was the murderer from the very beginning, saith Christ
Himself; the murderer of all men, and the father of all lies ;
of which this was one, that he told to Eve here at the fourth
verse, that if she would hearken to him, she should not
surely die. I am afraid, saith St. Paul, lest by any means, 2 Cor. 11.
as the serpent beguiled Eve through his subtilty, so your ^'
minds should be corrupted, and yourselves seduced from the
truth and the sincerity of Christ's religion. They that so go
about seducing, to teach any other doctrine than he taught, 2 Cor. 11.
he calls them Satan's ministers ; and wherever they come to ^'
you for that end, ye are to take them for no other.
From hence it is, that as sin is called the poison of serpents, Ps. ss. 4.
in the Psalms, so they that are poisoned with it and give
themselves over to it, are called a generation of serpents in Mat. 3. 7 ;
the Gospel ; and he that poisons them, a piercing and a "' ' '' '^•
crooked serpent, in Isaiah; a scorpion or a stinging serpent, isa. 27. 1.
in St. Luke; a dragon and the old serpent, in St. John. ]'^- ''*:'^"
. . Hev. 20. 2.
And this serpent it was that here seduced the woman, in
the form and shape of a natural serpent ; from taking which
form and shape upon him here at first, he had his name
given him ever after. It is usually said that he possessed
and entered into the body of the serpent ; most of the best
230 WJiy our first jiarents tvere permitted to be templed.
S E R M. writers''' that I liave met witlial, incline to say, and so do I,
XVI . ^
— '■ — that he took only his shape or likeness upon him and was
but personatus serpens, as in Saul's case he was but person-
ating Samuel. Somewhat it is that Peter Lombard ', the
!Master of the Sentences, says to this matter. He proposes
tAvo questions, the first why God would permit the devil to
tempt our first parents at all; and he resolves that out of
St. Austin, that it was ad exercitium obedienti<2^ , for the
exercise and trial of their obedience, whether they would
stand a temptation out or no, as they had grace, strength,
and ability to have done it if they Avould; and if they had
stood it out, it had been on God's part but like the trial of
Abraham, they would have got the more glory by it, as he
did by his, quia gloriosius esset tentanti non consensisse, quam
tentari non potuisse, it had been a greater glory for them not
to have given Avay to the temptation, not to be overcome with
it, than not to have been tempted at all. Therefore, says
Luther well, God deals with us as He dealt Avitli our first
parents. No sooner did He create them, but He suffered
the tempter to come to them ; no sooner doth He baptize us,
but He puts us in mind to resist the tempter ; for one or other
of these tempters, Avliom we there promise to resist, will be
"with us all our life long : with us to make us run into sin,
with us to make us run aAvay from our religion, with us to
make us murmur and give over hope in time of affliction,
every W'ay and every where with us; and all this by the
special proAidence and permission of God, and for the greater
trial of our faith and obedience towards Him, to prove us
k Quinta et ultima sententia est, plicattueturque Augustinustaniinlibris
quam nos solam approbamus et am- de Civitate Dei (lib. xiv. cap. 11.) quam
plectimur, fuisse in ca tentatione verum in Genesi ad litteram, (lib. ii. cap. 27.)
et naturalem serpentem, in quern tamen Percr. ad Genes., torn. i. p. 191.
sese diabolus insinuavit, et per eum ' Prwterea quseri solet cur Deus
quasi per organum suum formavit voces hominem tentari permiserit quern di-
lumianas,etsermonemcumEvamiscens, ripiendum fore prjesciebat ? Sed non
callida et malitiosa tentatione earn de- esset laudabile homini si ideo bene
cepit. Hasc sententia est probata fere • vivere posset, quia nemo male vivere
Patribus, utvidere licet apud liasilium, suaderet ; cum in natura posset et in
Chrysostomum, et Theodoretum, Be- potestate liabere vellet non consentire
dam et ilupertum, in suis vel Homiliis suadenti, Deo juvante ; et est (jlorio-
vel Qu;estionibus vel Connnentariis in sius non consentire quam tentari non
Gencsim, apud Damascenum, lib. ii. posse. (August, super Gen., lib. ii. cap.
do Fide Orthodoxa, cap. x. et apud 4.) P. Lombardi Sentent., lib. ii. dis-
Magist. Sent., lib. ii. dist. 21. et ibid. finct. 23. A.
Scholasticos Tbeologos : quam senten- "' Pet. Lonil)., lib. ii. dist. 21 A.
tiam plurimis et disertissimis verbis ex-
Why the devil came in the likeness of a serpejit. 231
how stcadfustlv we will hold to Ilim. Which fuitli, if it holds
out the trial and changes not, grows not the worse for it, is
a trial more precious, saith St. Peter, than that of gold, the i I'^t- i"-
trial of gold in the fire, where the pure and true metal wastcth
not at all. This was an answer to Lombard's first question,
why God would suffer Eve to be tempted by the devil.
The second is, whv He would suUer the devil to come to
her in the likeness of a serpent ?
And tliis he resolves first, in the general, that in some
likeness or other he was to come, when he came to tempt
and seduce ; otherwise if he had. come altogether unmasked,
in his own likeness, he would have been taken for no tempter
at all, and there would have been no trial neither, no con-
versing, no conference entertained with him at all. A tempter
must shroud himself in another form, and ever come in some
likeness that is a little better than his own. There are them
that have wished to see the dcAdl : thev shall never see him
as he is vet, that must be reserved for another time ; but in
the several forms of temptation they may see him every day.
And though the woman at Endor could help Saul to a sight i Sam. 27.
.8
of him ; yet in his own likeness, it was past her skill and her
permission to do it, for this is one of the chains that are cast
upon those e\-il spirits, wherewith the devil and his angels
are bound up, who are reserved in everlasting chains under
darkness, saith St. Jude, unto the judgment of the great day, Jude G.
never to appear in their own proper likeness till then.
In some other therefore it was to be. For which other in
particular God" permitted him here to appear in the hkeness
of a serpent, who among all the beasts of the field was said Gtn.;?. i.
to be the wiliest and the most subtle creature of all the rest,
that thereby both the malice and subtilty of the devil's nature
might be the better expressed, for that was most agreeable
to him, and Eve also from thence have the better warning
by him Avhat his nature and his drift was, the better to take
heed of him. For otherwise if he might have had his own
will, and been suffered to come in what likeness he would
" Non est putandum quod diabolus missus est. Nocendi eniin cupidita.s
serpentem per quem tentaret elegerit ; inest cuique a se, sed potestas a Deo
sed cum decipere cuperet, non potuit solo est. S. August de Geneii ad
nibi per quod animal posset a Deo per- litteram, lib. ii. cap. 3.
232 IVIiat Eve snj)posed the sei'pent to he.
S E R M. have chosen liimself, peradveiiture, says the Master of the
— '-- Schools, and it is most likely, that the devil wonld have rather
chosen the likeness of a dove than the likeness of a serpent,
the sooner to deceive her°.
And so from this first point, what he was, we are now come
at last to the second, — for that will be all I shall be able to
despatch to-day — what Eve here supposed and took him
to be.
The question is, whether she took him to be the serpent,
or one of the evil spirits in the serpent's Hkeness ? If we say
she took him to be the natural and brute serpent, we run
upon the former rock ; it will be unreasonable to imagine
it, that she, — who wanted nothing of the perfection of all
knowledge and the insight into the nature and condition of
all creatures then, when she was in the state of her integrity,
— should not better know the nature and condition of a brute "
serpent, than to think that one of them could speak and dis-
course to her, could persuade and argue with her like a
reasonable creature p. Then that was not it.
Again, if we say she kncAv him to be the de^■il, who had
got that shape upon him ; if she knew him to be one of those
wicked spirits whom she knew to be fallen from their Maker,
as she did, there will be another question to assoil and answer.
AVhy did she then converse with liim ? Why did she listen to
him at all'i?
For the answering of which question, besides her curiosity
that here transported her, and the liberty of her will that gave
her leave for her trial to converse with any creature or spirit
whatsoever, we are likewise to enquire what inducements she
had to converse with this spirit rather in this kind of like-
ness, the likeness of a serpent, than another,
p. 237. First, this she knew, that the serpent was the wisest and
the subtlest of all the beasts of the field that God had made ;
this chapter begins with it, and thereby implies the woman's
° Ut ergo in propria forma non ve- ^ Tho. Aqiiiu. in 1 par. q. 94. art.
nirct, vohintate suajjropria faituni est; u]t.
lit autein in forma su;e maliti® con- 1 See Pererius in Genes., tom. i. p.
grutnti veiiiret, divinitus factum est. 19(i, wiiere he discusses the question,
Venit ergo ad iiomineni in serjiente, 'Cur Eva non obstupuerit audiens
qui forte, si permitteretur, in columbip sccum loquentem et disputantem ser-
specie venire maluisset. Pet. Lonib. penteni.'
Sentent., lib. ii. dist. 21. B.
Groimds upon umich her siqipoaUiou wan founded. 203
opinion of tlie devil's wisdom ; wlio_, unless he had been a
very knowing and sagacious spirit, would never have taken
the shape of that subtle creature upon him. For otherwise
to what end are these words here spoken ? This therefore I
suppose she knew.
Secondly, this she knew also, that a spirit, if he will be p. 237.
conversed withal, must present himself in some corporal
shape or other ; for in reason we know as much ourselves,
that otherwise there can be no conversing with him ; and
the most knowing of us all arc far short of Eve, of the perfect
knowledge that she had then, as in all things else, so in this,
which we know still ; that as in natural and bodily things,
luiless those things have some proportion each to other, there
can be no intercourse of action between them ; which is the
law that God has ordained them. So likewise in things
invisible, w'hich therefore converse not with things that are
visible, but in a visible form. And this is so true, that all
the Scripture over w^e shall not find any such in\dsible spirit
presented, whether good or bad, to men here below, but they
come in some corporal figure or other, even in the very
dreams and visions of the night ; which is enough to confute
their vanity that say they would fain see a spirit ; for a spirit,
as he is, cannot be seen. This therefore I suppose likewise
that Eve knew^ Avell.
Thirdly, and lastly, this she knew, that as these spirits, if p. 238.
at any time they Avere permitted to come, they were to come
iu some outward and visible form, so was the form always to
be such as might best, less or more, resemble their condition.
In which respect we shall not read that God ever suff'ered a
good and a bad spirit, a noble and an ignoble one, an Angel
and a devil to appear unto men after the same fashion.
Therefore good Angels never came in any other shape but the
shape of a man ; and not in his neither, as he is now^, fallen
into the deformity of age and sin, but as he was in his
glorious beaut}^ of integrity and lustre before his fall. So of
the Angel that appeared in the Gospel, it is said there that Mat. 28. 3.
his countenance w^as like lightning and his raiment as white
as snow ; all iu glory and perfection, all in sublimity and
purity. Whereas on the contrary, the bad angels come either
in no human sliape at all ; or if they do, it is as it was at
234 Summary of the investifjatton.
s E R M. Endor, commonly like an old decrepit man -with a mantle upon
'- — his shoulder. And yet were they not suffered to come in that
1 Sam 28 .
]4.. ■ ■ form of man neither before liis fall ; the case is otherwise now,
and no marvel, since one fallen star may well resemble another.
But while man was in his integrity and perfection, the devil
might not be then suffered to take his form upon him at all.
For being himself fallen, through his pride and ambition,
from his own state of glory and perfection which he had
above, he was now permitted to appear in that shape only
which might declare his present state of abasement and im-
perfection here below, to which end and purpose there was
nothing more fit for him than the sliape of a serpent.
p. 239. Now put all these together and there needs not such a
wonder to be made, as otherwhiles, for want of searching into
the reasons and grounds of this Scripture, there is ; either
why the devil should come in the form of a serpent, or why
Eve in that form should entertain him. For though she
knew him to be one of tlie abased spirits, not permitted to
appear in any sensible form"^, yet by the shape he came and
appeared in, the sliape of the subtlest creature that was in
the field, she concluded with herself that he was a ver}^ subtle
and sagacious spirit, likely enough to search further into
God's meaning and to know more of it by his own experi-
ence, than she yet did*. And this undid her.
The conclusion of all is, that her high opinion of the ex-
cellent wit and sagacity that was in this spirit, and the strong
apprehension that she liad of his great knowledge and
wisdom above her own, and above the word of God, and all,
made her clean forget both herself and it, and so brought her
to her ruin.
A lesson for us all to take timely heed of all those evils
which the craft and subtilty of the dedl or man worketh
against us ; not over hastily to be carried away Avith a sudden
apprehension and a high opinion of men's excellent wits and
al)ilities, whatever they arc, without a special eye and regard
first had to the known words and commandments of God ;
I Pcrer. in Genes., lib. v. q. i. § .'Ij. by Estius in lib. ii. Sentent. dist. 21.
(0111. i. p. 170. § J., in answer to tbc question, ' Cur
• See S. Tho. i. p. q. !) ^, art. 1-. ad inulicr serpentem euinque loquentem
2, and the opinions which are examined non horruerit. '
How the effect of this sin is to be remedied. 235
the neglect wliereof, both in matters of rchgion and in matters
of moral life, and all, hath ever been, and now is, the greatest
occasion of the greatest errors and wickedness in the world,
whiles the devil under this mask and in this cup carries some
serpentine poison for us to drink. A theme I have no time
to prosecute now, but I Avill resume it again in the next
sermon, for this is done, and I think the hour is done. We
are to go to the Sacrament.
Where we shall have a spiritual meat to eat, and a cup to
drink of the New Testament that will cure us of the serpent's
poison which we contracted here from the Old. I told you
besides of caliv dcemoniorum. We have all been eating of
this forbidden fruit and tasting of that forbidden cup, more
or less, every one of us, as well as our mother Eve. And
there is no cure for us, but this that Christ brings us, for He
drank off our cup of wrath, the fruit of our sins, that v/e
might drink His cup of blessing, the fruit of His passion.
Which He of His mercy make effectual to us, That prepared
that cup and endured that passion for us, Jesus Christ the
righteous, to Whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost,
three Persons and one eternal Deity, be all honour and glory,
now and for evermore. Amen.
SEllMON XVll.
PARIS, MARCH 26, 1G51. [nEW STYLe].
QUINTA DOMINICA aUADRAGESlMiE.
We shall make an end to-day of our last text in the third
chapter of Genesis, the thirteenth verse.
And the woman said, the serpent beyuiled me.
s E R M. Two questions there were ; first, what this serpent was
'^ indeed; and secondly, what Eve supposed him to be.
I told you of resemblances that were no true stories ; I
made good this story to be no feigned resemblance.
For first, it was a serpent here that could speak, and hold
conference with Eve a good while together ; and then it was
a serpent that could dispute and give her divers reasons, such
as they were, against the precept that God had given her
before.
see p. 228. Which makes it clear that it would be none of the natural
and brute serpent, this, as Julian the apostate said it was,
who would needs take it for no other, and thereupon both
rejected this story and blasphemed all the Holy Scriptures
besides, that depend upon it. But, as St. Cyril, that was in
his time the Patriarch of Alexandria, told him, there was
never any man before him so unreasonable as to think or say
it was the unreasonable serpent itself; for how could that
creature, that had no language at all, confer with Eve in lier
own language, as this serpent did ? Or from whence should
he take knowledge what commandment God had laid upon
her, as this serpent likewise did, befoi'c she had told him of
it? Never let Julian, never lot any of his disciples, trouble
Division of the subject. 237
themselves about the brute serpcut; Moses here meaut
auother ; aud for sonic other person, that had assumed upon
him that sliape only, did Eve take him.
She took him to be, as he was, one of those spirits that
had been in heaven ; and though now fallen down from his
first station, yet liaving once been there, was likely enough
to know more than she did, Avhicli tempted her to her
curiosity, and that curiosity undid her.
For the better understanding whereof, we are to reflect
here (1.) upon the form Avherein he appeared;
(2.) Then upon himself;
(3.) And next upon the woman, who says now she was
beguiled by him. Three heads whereof this sermon will be
made.
But before we begin to preach, I am to invite you all
to pray, as for God's grace aud blessing upon us now, so
that now and always ye would make your daily suppHca-
tions and prayers for the good estate of Christ's Catholic
Cluirch, and for the peace and welfare of all Christian
kings and princes.
More especially for the distressed estate &c.
Pater Noster, ^c.
That we may apprehend this Scripture right, we are to
reflect first, upon the form wherein this seducing spirit was
permitted to appear. And somewhat we began to say of it
before ; now we go on.
It is said here at the beginning of this chapter, that the p. 232.
serpent was subtle, the subtlest of all the other beasts of the
field which God had made. And this we will suppose that
both the e\il spirit knew, who therefore meant to make his
use of it ; and that Eve knew it besides, who for that very
reason was taken with a high opinion of this spirit's wisdom,
and conceived him to be no other than a very subtle and
sagacious spirit at least, that had gotten that form of a subtle
and a wise serpent upon him, above all others making choice
of that.
Then this likewise we must suppose, that in his own p. 233.
proper likeness he could not any way either confer with her,
238 Recapitulation of what had been said
S E R M. or appear to her at all ; for then there had been no propor-
XVII ...
— ^ tion between them, "without wliich there is not any intercourse
of action or passion in any thing. A general and an ex-
perienced law that, w hich God hath ordained to all things ;
and therefore things invisible and removed from our senses,
must be one way or other made to be sensible to us, before
we can have any conversing with them. Which is so true,
that all the Scripture over, we shall not find any of these
created spirits, whether good or bad, appearing and present-
ing themselves to men, but in some bodily figure or other.
Therefore the woman at Endor, when Saul came to her and
desired her to let him have a sight of the devil, that he might
the better confer with him, though she had leave to fetch
1 Sam. 28. him up, yet in his own likeness to do it, it was beyond her
skill and her permission both. For this is one of the devil's
Jude 6. chains, whereof St.Jude speaks when he says the devil and
his angels are bound up and reserved in everlasting chains of
darkness, there to remain unto the judgment of the great
day, and never to appear in their own likeness till then ; and
then they shall see him soon enough that have been so
desirous to see him before ; but as yet he shall never be seen
as he is, nor he, nor any spirit of them all. And it is no way
improbable to say, that Eve here knew as much.
p. 23?. Thirdly, this she might well know besides ; that as they
came not in their own likeness, so the likeness they came in
was less or more a resemblance of their own condition, and
a token of what nature and quality they had in them. In
Avhich respect w^e shall never read again, unless it be in a
legend, that God ever suffered a good and a bad spirit, a
noble and an ignoble one, to appear and come to men after
one and the same manner; but good Angels always in the
likeness of men, and in that likeness wherein man was at
first created, without any deformities of sin or age upon him,
when he was j'^et in a state of perfection and beauty, the
better to express the state and condition that those glorious
Angels now have ; bad angels either appearing in no human
figure at all, or else with those marks of malice and impurity
upon them, as might best also express their own malicious
property and condition with it. Indeed it is no great wonder
now, if since the fall of man, this seducing spirit comes other-
as to Elbe's specniaiions concerning the serpoit. 239
whiles to them that Avill entertain him, in the likeness of
seducinj^ and wicked men, in a human shape now ; but before
the fall there was no such permission given him, for because
fallen into the state of imperfection and wickedness liimsclf,
which as yet man was not, the state of man's perfection and
integrity was not yet for him. Afterwards it might well be,
for one falling star may well enough resemble another; but
he being withal a subtle and a Avily spirit, there was nothing
more agreeable for him to assume now, nor, as we see it
proved too, more likely to win the woman's great opinion of
his wisdom, and to take her in his snare, than to take this
shape of the subtle and wily serpent, which he knew that she
also knew to be then the wisest and the subtlest creature of
the field. Since the curse that went here upon the devil and
him together, the case may be altered, but then it was so.
All which put together, renders this text to be somewhat p. 231-.
the clearer, and not altogether so improbable even to very
natural reason and sense itself as some men, that never yet
sat down to weigh and consider it well, have imagined it
to be.
But if we add the sense that all the other Scriptures have
given it, as we have great reason, and the greatest of the
world to believe what tliev sav in all things, so we shall have
the greatest authority of the world that can be given us for
tliis particular.
The authority of the Prophets, and Apostles, and of Christ p. 229.
Himself, who whenever they have occasion to speak of the
first coming in of sin and death into the world, they reflect
all upon this story; and from the form and figure of a
serpent, that the devil was permitted to take upon him here
at the beginning, they gave him his name and express his
natm-e bv it ever after. I need not trouble you with many
places. St. Paul, where he tells us of the serpent that 2Cor.ii.3.
beguiled Eve, he calls that serpent the dc\dl, and says he is
afraid of him still, lest he should by his under-agents be as
busy with any of us, as he was with her, and get away from
us either the truth of our religion or the sincerity of our life.
And hence it is, that as sin is called the poison of serpents, Ps. 58. 4.
in the Psalms ; so they that are poisoned with it are called a Mat. 23.
generation of serpents, in the Gospel ; and he that poisons "
240 What Eve supposed the serpent to be.
S E R M. them, a piercing and a l)iting serpent, in the Prophets ; a
- ■^J^::_ scorpion and a stinging serpent, a dragon and the okl serpent,
Amosf) 3. "^ S^- John. And so we have done with his form, that liere
Ezek. 2. 6. he assumed, or was permitted to assume upon himself.
12.9. ' II. The next point is, what Eve took him to he, and the
excellency' of that wit and sagacity that she conceived to lie
in him ; for both by his appearing to her, first in this manner
as he did, and then by telling her such strange news out of
heaven, as well concerning God there, from Whose presence
he was lately departed, therefore knew His mind better than
she did, as concerning herself here, whom out of his special
care and regard towards her, as he made her believe, he was
now come to save and preserve for ever ; such an opinion he
had by this time bred in her that she took him to be no less
than a spirit of some extraordinary wisdom and knowledge at
the least, hkely enough to help her to more skill and to bring
her into a better estate than God had formerly provided for
her. But this undid her, when she laid aside God's own
word and listened after another.
It undoes all the world, tliis ; and has been, as it was here
at first, this conceited opinion of getting more help by others
than we are ever like to do by God Himself, the greatest
cause of the greatest mischief and errors in the world.
■ For from hence came in all the old idolatry and corrup-
tions of the world, when haAdng men's persons in admiration,
Jiide ir>. as St. Jude speaks, because of some advantage that they
looked for from them, they served them better and trusted
them more, both alive and dead, than they did the God of
heaven and earth. Whom they knew all had made them all to
another purpose. But advantage and interest, Avhercin they
were deceived too as well as Eve was here, carried it then,
and so does it still.
Else, how comes the new-found idolatry to be exalted and
continued in the world so much as it is ? nisi quia inde
Acts 19. acquisitio nobis, as Demetrius and the craftsmen said of that
^*- spirit which they called their Diana, but that they promise
themselves more by it, more indulgence for this life and
more security for the next than ever they can hope to receive
at God's hands, if tliey should keep themselves so precisely
to His express word whicli He hath enjoined them?
All sin is en-or. 241
The devil told Eve that it might be -a\\ that God said was
not true, and she believed him ; they do little less that say
more is true than God ever revealed to us, and credit a
lying spirit that speaks traditions and revelations to them of
their own making, more than they do all that INIoses and the
Prophets have said besides.
This made St. Paul to say that the mystery of iniquity 2Thes.'2.7.
began thus to work even in his time ; and he meant no other
mystery but the bringing in of new devices in religion, and
giving ear to seducing spirits, which he calls there the
doctrines of devils, reflecting upon this story where the devil ] Tim. 4. i.
preached to Eve another manner of doctrine than God had } '^'"'- 2-
ever taught her. But such doctrines never come alone ; the
Apostle says they used to bring a train after them, and so i Tim. 4.
they do, the train of all manner of sins and iniquities, wher- ^~~'^-
ever they are ; which was the fruit that it brought forth
Lere, besides all other mischiefs and miseries of the world
that followed it after ; as such miseries, unless it be in most
places better heeded and better restrained than we see yet it
is, are like to follow it still.
I will say no more in this point, but that we ought so
heedfully to admit and entertain a tempter, when at any
time those evil spirits come to us to corrupt either our life or
religion, as that God's eternal Avord and commandment be
ever in our eye ; without which fixed pole-star to guide us,
we shall be carried we know not whither; but Eve was
carried here to her ruin.
And so I come to the third point, and the last ; that this
tempter, this serpentine devil, beguiled her.
III. There is a guile in every sin of the world : I shall
shew you both what it is, and what it was here ; for guile
is nothing else but a piece of the deviFs sophistry to deceive
us with a false syllogism, the premises whereof being both
counterfeit, needs must the conclusion be altogether errone-
ous. It argues for a seeming good, and ends in a real evil ;
pretending to pleasure us, it either bereaves us of that good
we hoped for, or brings upon us that evil which we never
expected. Such a deceit there is, and such another prac-
tical syllogism do we all make, in every sin we commit. For Rom. li.
as the root is, so are the liranches ; and from this root and ^^•
COSIN. £j
242 The points in ivhich Eve ivas deceived.
S E R M. practice here at tlie beginning came tlie offspring of sin ever
XVII.
since.
There are in every action, and so in every sin, two things
whereof it consists ; the choice of our end, and the means to
attain that end. If either of these be wrong, there is a sin
committed ; and in both of them is this practical sophistry to
be seen, wliich the schools call a fallacy, and we the deceit
or guile of sin.
These two they are, cither when an evil end is presented
to us in the counterfeit of a good, and so we find ourselves
deceived in the event ; or else when we use such means as
be neither lawful nor sufficient to attain our end, and so we
find ourselves deceived in the premises; being both so
masked and covered over with a seeming advantage, that
they appear to vis in a hkeness far otherwise than they are.
And with both these sorts of guile was she here deceived.
So are we all.
1. First, in the end, by making it seem a thing desirable
and above all other ends to aim at, this, that she might have
her own will, and do what she list ; for then she should be
like unto God Himself, and be an independent ; no power in
Gen. 3. 5. heaveu and earth should control her, a bait laid to take her
and gilded over with Eritis sicut dii, which seems to be one of
the most desirable things of the world. This deceived her first.
Then in the means, next, by persuading her that if the end
be good and desirable, as it did but seem to be neither, she
might then take her liberty again, and make use of any
means whatsoever to compass it ; though it were the breach
of God's severe commandment to the contrary, not to stand
upon it, or regard ever a precept of them all, but to venture,
and put Him to it whether that which He had said were
true or no, or the danger so great as He had made it. For
either it was not so certain as it might seem to be, or else
that iniquity wliich might be in the action would be counter-
vailed abundantly, both with the end and advantage that
should be gotten by it, for she should be made what she would,
and with the content and delight that she should find in it be-
Geii. 3. a. sides, for it was a pleasant thing to look upon, and some con-
tentment there is to do that which we are forbidden, for then
we have our will, and there is no lord over us for the while.
Necessity of caution against these wiles. 243
This being then the devil's method to tempt ns to sin,
in this his first act we may behold, as in a glass, the art
that he still uses to corrupt the world, and to bring it to
utter destruction. All his method is nothing else but guile.
He presents all things fair and pleasant to the view ; and if
there be any evil in them, that he hides with his mantle, and
suffers not any sin to appear before us in its own ugly and
deformed shape that it has of itself, for so every one would
fly from it, but presents works of vice and darkness as objects
of beauty and delight ; and when he plots our ruin and ever-
lasting undoing, he bears us in baud that all aims at our
contentment and felicity.
It behoves us to be jealous and suspicious of him, thougli
we see him not all our life long. For he will neither let us
see him, nor our sins, in their OAvn likeness, as they are, no
more now than he did here at first.
In all which that the disguise may be pulled oflP, and the
guile that lies under it be seen the better, let us consider
and look upon them both again.
The end, first, Eritis siciit dii, you shall do what you will Gen. 3. 5.
and depend upon nobody for your actions ; the height and
glory of which end so strongly possessed her aspiring fancy
that the means to attain that end, Avhether it were good or
bad, she little regarded, but that end must now be only
prosecuted and had. And as one that always looks upward
in his walk, and sees not the danger that lies in the path
wherein he goes, till he falls into a pit, so was it here ;
nothing regarded but the state and glory of what was pro-
posed, in what condition she should be then. Eritis sicut
dii, was the state, and morte moriemini was the pit.
Ero similis Altissimo, says the devil; the great leviathan Isa. M. 14.
himself bit at that bait and was taken with it. So are the
lesser creatures after him ; Capitur, sed capit ; it deceives
them, it undoes them all that meddle with it. And this by
his own experience he knew well enough, that had tried it
and found it to be so already.
This sets him at Avork for others ; and he gets men to pro-
pose ends to themselves of being at more liberty and great-
ness than they are, that when they are out of God's ordering
thev mav fall into his and come into the disorder and ruin
R 2
244 Eve desired to be independent of God.
s E R M. wliicli he fell into himself. For the truth is, there are no
-^^-Hi_ such disorderly, no sueh miserable persons in the world, nor
nearer akin to the de^^l, than those are that suffer them-
selves to be cheated by him, as she here did ; out of God's
Jas. 1. 2.5. awe and scr\-ice, which is perfect freedom, to take his, the
devil's livery of liberty and independency upon them, which
is perfect slavery, a perpetual servitude both to his lusts
and their own.
Which made Luther to wish, and truly not much amiss,
as he was once preaching upon this text, and considering
the mischiefs that this desire and practice of liberty had
brought into the world, Si mihi nunc ojjtio daretur, ' If I
might have my mind,' nollem mihi dari, noUem ullis uspiam
hominibus dari lianc arbitrii Ubertatem, ' I would neither have
any freedom of my will myself, and I would that neither
Eve nor any of her posterity had ever had it.' For he saw
such ill use made of it by all manner of persons, both in
matters of religion and in the affairs of the world, that he
judged them only the happiest who had least to do with it.
And this made him write his book De ^ servo arbitrio ; not
that man had no free-will at all, but that he knew not how
to use it to a right end, without suffering the devil to abuse
it, and divert it to a wrong; for God He had bounded it
with a law, and liberty will be lawless, Avill have no bounds
to keep it in, nor inclosui'es to limit it.
It is a ranging and an inconsiderate will that most men
have, of a temper so strangely miswrought by this first
corruption, that every one miist do now what is right in his
own eyes, or else there shall be neither any king in Israel
nor any God upon the earth. Eritis sicut dii will not yet be
got out of them, tiU morte morieris comes ; but then it will
be found what conference they have had Av-ith this wicked
spirit, and that the serpent it Avas, whoever they are, that
beguiled them all.
This is the lawless end and purpose that was here aimed
at, wherein the first part of the dexil's guile appeared ; for it
Avas no true desirable end at all, it was the ground of all
pride and disorder, and she persisted in it besides.
3. But then secondly, say the end had been allowable and
» 0pp., torn. iii. fol. 1C5''. edit. 1557.
fVe may not do evil that good may follow. 245
the event good, yet if the means to attain that end be not
good and allowable besides, there is another guile committedj
anil so it was here. Where the devil persuades her that to
compass her end she might do any thing, make bold with
God's severe commandment, and all; and seeing there was
no other means left to do it, to venture upon that.
Wherein the fallacy lies, either in that false rule that some
evil may be done in case of assurance, or hope, that some
good shall come of it ; or in that groundless suggestion that
men are made to be more afraid of God's commandments
than they need to be, and that the danger of transgressing
them is not so great nor so perilous as the world is borne in
hand withal it is.
Two cases here first brought and suggested by the devil,
whereof the world, this flesh and blood of Eve to which they
are both plausible, and that would fain have it so, hath made
but an ill use ever since ; for they do but deceive and beguile
themselves in them both.
I ask, first, what evil may not this produce; if any evil
may be done or permitted, that any good may come of it, as
she here thought there would ? Extend it further to any case.
It is not lawful in any act of our life, not lawful in religion
itself to do any evil act whatsoever, either to maintain the
one or to preserve the other, not to preserve the world itself.
For all the world is not worth one sin ; and it is no paradox
to say it. For sin takes life, the life of man and the life of
religion, and all, the soul of them both ; and what would not
a man give for his life ? not only skin for skin, and all that Job 2. 4.
he has, but all the world besides if he had it, all should go,
which, if it were worth more, he would not then so easily
part withal. But for matters of life, first, they that do any
evil to maintain it, if they come to lose it by that evil, it is
but an evil bargain they make for it; though they say it
is to keep themselves from starving, yet if it be the for-
bidden fruit, under which term all manner of sin was here
presented, there must be no meddling with it.
For Avas it laAvful for them in the Avilderness to run back
again into the bondage of Egypt that they might keep them-
selves from starving ? It was one of the devil's suggestions
that, and St. Paul wishes us to take notice Avhat success it
246 Illustrations ofivhat has been advanced
S E R M. had, wlien God grew so angry with them for it, that in the
^ same wilderness He destroyed them alL
Then for matters of rehgion, to preserve that, or for the
avoiding of a greater evil, to prevent that. Was it lawful for
Ex. 32. 2. Aaron to take the people's ear-rings, and to allow them a fond
idolatrous religion of their neighbours, that he might keep
them in some order, and save himself from stoning ? It is the
same case with them at this day, or ver}^ near it, that say for
their excuse they must of necessity give way to the madness
of their people, and permit them somewhat to busy themselves
withal, or else there Avould be no religion at all, nor no living
among them. \Miich 'somewhat,' if we instance but in two
cases, that of images, which was Aaron's case, in setting them
up to be openly adored ; that of prostitutions, which was Lot's
case, in setting those houses open, to be publicly and allow-
ably frequented : which they say they do to keep up the
people's devotion by the one, and to avoid a worse mischief
by the other, both these. There is never a person of religion
and judgment among them, but they know well enough there
is an open breach of God's indispensable commandments in
them both ; which is more than Aaron or Lot did, having no
other argument to excuse it but what the serpent here be-
guiled Eve withal ; that the danger in these matters is not
so great, nor the venturing upon a transgression in this kind
so evil, but that it may be licensed and allowed well enough
to prociu'e a greater good ; though the truth be, that in all
ages there has nothing more procured the wrath of God to
come down upon the children of disobedience, which is the
Epli. 5. c. Apostle's OAvn expression, than these two sins of spmtual and
carnal luxiuy ; excuse them, they that do so, as long as they
wdll, the Prophets said ever that the rest of the world suffers
for them. But when the master of the politics shall come in
with his rapine and spoil, his treachery and his murder, even
of them that are never so innocent, of kings and princes, and
all, if they stand in his way, as the Florentine secretary'^, and
somebody else does, from whom they had it all that have
lately put all this in practice ; and when all this, as evil as it
is, begins to be made an allowable and a needful means for
the procuring of that end whicli they call the general good of a
'' Mcicliiavclli.
respecting the devil's temptations. 247
state, for my part I am apt to believe that since tins bcguiler
here liatli so generally corrupted the Avorld, tlie world that
began here and is now grown so old with sin, will shortly be
at an end.
And then what manner of persons ought we to be, in the
actions of onr life and religion both ? to be wary of any evil
that may assail either, and to practise that only which we
shall be sure will be pleasing to God in them both ; for evil 2 Tim. 3.
1 o
men and seducers, saith St. Paul, shall wax worse and worse,
deceiving and being deceived.
I could go on to other instances, but by these you may take
the measure of many a number more, wherein this deceiver
makes the world believe that they shall never be called to an
account for their sins. It is either he, or, as St. James says jas. 1.22.
of them that go to hear sermons and are never the better for
them ; it is themselves beguiling their own souls with it,
which is the worst deceit of all. But whether it be he, or
they, or both, as indeed both it is, here is a judge Who, as
lie came to enquire of this woman here about it at first, so
Avill He do ere long of all her posterity after her; when
neither one excuse nor other will serve the turn, but judg-
ment will follow upon them that folloAv this serpent and his
seducers, a doom to misery and pain, whereof this that was
first given upon all the three transgressors here in the next
verses, was but an earnest and a type of what should come
hereafter ; — but upon them that have gotten their heels out
of his snares, and made their peace with one God and Christ,
blessed for ever. Who came into the world to deliver us from
these snares, and to break the serpent's head in pieces, — to
them a doom of everlasting joy and happiness, whereof this
paradise here before was an earnest, and that in His eternal
kingdom of glory, whereunto God of His mercy bring us all ;
to Whom belongeth all holiness, honour, and power, now and
for evermore. Amen.
SERMON XVIII.
rAius, Ai'Kii^ 16, 1(>.3]. [new style.]
IN OCTAVA RESURRECTIONIS.
John xx. 9.
Nondum enim sciebant ScrijJturas, ^x.
For as yet they knew not the Scriptures, that He must rise from
the dead.
S E R M. This day is the octave^ tliat is^ tlie return and tlie renew-
-^^^^^- ing of Easter day itself; wherein tlie text was, as this is, of
Christ's rising again the third day according to the Scrip-
tures; St. Paul's text to the Corinthians''.
What those Scriptures were in particular, we had no time
then to set forth, but reserved them till now ; and now we
shall go on.
It is said here of St. Peter and St. John, that as yet they
knew not those Scriptures ; for want of which knowledge it
was that at first they doubted M'hether Christ was risen
or no.
But afterwards. Cum nperuerit illis mentem, ut intelUgerent
Scripturas, when lie had opened their wits, that they might
understand the Scriptures, they believed them better than
their own eyes, and doubted nothing of it at all.
It behoves us to know what those Scriptures be, that as
yet they knew not ; whereunto we are referred both by them,
and by Christ Himself, for a more clear and evident proof of
" This sermon is not preserved ; it is used in ^Vlorning Service instead of the
prohahlc that the text was taken from Psahn, ' O come, let us sing nnto the
some of the versicles appointed to he Lord.'
Division of the subject -matter. 249
His resurrection than any their own senses afforded them, or
than ours would have afforded us, if we had lived in their
days and seen Christ rising out of His grave.
The words relate, first, to the knowledge of the Scriptures,
and the Scriptures relate to the knowledge of the resurrec-
tion, which is so needful a point to be known and believed
by us all, that without this we shall believe nothing else, and
without the Scriptures we shall not believe this.
To reflect therefore, as the text leads us, first, upon them
liere that knew not the Scriptures, and then on those Scrip-
tures that as yet they knew not, relating to the resurrection ;
where we will first look upon the certainty of it, that so it
was.
Next upon the necessity of it, that so it behoved to be, that
Christ must rise from the dead.
These two to confirm us, first, in our faith, and then to
establish us in our hope, together with the \'irtue and opera-
tion that they ought to have, both of them, upon our lives,
will be the heads and parts of our sermon to follow.
Of which that, &c., we beseech, &c., .... putting
you in mind to pray, both now and always, for the good
estate, &c., .... more especially for the distressed estate
of the kingdom and Church in, &c., .... and therein for
our sovereign lord and master, Charles, by the grace of
God king of England, Scotland, France and Ireland,
defender of the faith, and in all causes over all persons,
within his own dominions by the right and title, supreme
governor.
For om' gracious lady the queen, and all the royal
family; for the king's honourable council, and all the
nobility ; for the reverend prelates of the Church and all
the clergy ; for the universities and all the people.
Kendering likewise praise for all God's mercies and
favours over us, among which favours specially to reckon
this our profession of His true faith and religion together,
in the midst of all these adversities and temptations that
are daily upon us to draw us from it; and for all those
that have constantly professed the same heretofore, having
been the choice vessels, &c.
Our Father, &c.
250 St. Peter not infallible.
s E j{ M. ' For as yet they knew not the Scriptures that Christ must
'- rise from the dead/
' As yet they knew not.' And because St. Peter Avas one
of these that knew not, here I stay. First, they that stand
so much for St. Peter above all the Apostles besides, and say
that he knew all things and missed in nothing, after Christ
had once given him the keys, every time they read this
Gospel they see themselves confuted here by St. John, who
knew the defects both of St. Peter and himself, and of all
his fellow disciples together, better than these men ever
knew St. Peter's prerogative above the rest.
Of the rest they are not so solicitous, only St. Peter must
not fail nor err in one thing ; which they do not say for his
sake neither, as they do for his whom they hold with as
little probability to have succeeded him in his chair ; for, not
to meddle Avith him, Avithout all doubt St. Peter here failed
for once, if he doubted of Christ's resiu-rection, as he did,
because as yet he knew not the Scriptures that belonged to it.
And yet not only tu es Petrus, but the dabo tibi claves, and
the rogavi pro te, and all, had been all three said and past
already.
But peradventure his chair was not yet set up, or it may
be he had not yet taken a full possession of it ; for that they
say was given him in the next chapter after this, by virtue of
i oh.2\. \G. pasce oves meas, the Avords that they find there, when for
reason of his three denials, he had a charge thrice laid upon
him to take care of the Church.
HoAv Avent it therefore after this was past ? Truly how it
Avent Avith him at another place, a city where they say
neither he nor any that ever folloAved him there could yet
possibly fall into error about any matter of faith; hoAV it
went there, for aught I can learn, nobody could ever yet
certainly inform us. But how it went with him at a city
called Cffisarea, and that a full year too after pasce oves Avas
past, St. Peter himself Avill ingenuously tell us in the tenth
ver. 31. chapter of the Acts ; that till then, for want of knowing
the Scriptures too, he had fallen into another error, and
thought before that time, that God had been an accepter
of persons, Avhich error there in open audience he recanteth
before them all.
St. Peter's knowledge ivas prof/ress^ive. 251
It \yas not for nothing that St. Paul said, all our know-
ledge is in part and all our prophesying in part; that is, i Cor. 13.
tliat it comes not to us altogether at a time, for it did not so '
Avith him ; nor here with St. John and St. Peter himself, who
helieved the sepulchre to be empty because they saw it to ver. a.
be so, the words before, but could not yet believe that Christ
was risen, because as yet they knew not the Scriptm'es, the
words here ; but when they knew them once, the Scriptures,
that had foretold it of old, must of necessity be fulfilled at
that time, then they were of another mind.
It will be the like case with us in any thing besides,
where in any point of truth we stand in doubt, there to have
the same recourse to the Scriptures that they had, and we
shall perceive things never the worse, clearer a great deal
than we did before, or can ever do without them ; it was
their case here.
Only this are we to look to, that with St. Peter, and
St. John, and the rest of the disciples after, when the Scrip-
tures are opened to us, to shew us any truth, we would like-
wise open our eyes to perceive that truth ; and Avhen we find
men, ourselves or others, to be in any error against them,
that we Avould be so ingenuous as readily to acknowledge
that error. All is laid here upon the truth and knowledge
of the Scriptures ; Avhich Ave are to extend, Avhere need is,
to all other points of religion Avhatsoever, Avhereof there be
many no less doubted of in the Avorld noAV, than here and
elsewhere the resurrection was at first. But to this parti-
cular because we are now confined, we Avill not noAv touch
upon any other. And yet the Scriptures will be able to clear
them all, all other points of our faith and religion, no less
than this.
Which being the main and the chiefest point of all, the
Apostles, after they Avere confirmed in it themselves, took
more pains to clear and to set it forth to the Avorld than
they did any the rest ; as knoAA ing well that the whole frame
of our religion, in life and death, and all, depended upon it ;
for without this, who need to trouble themselves about either
of these, but first sit doAvn to eat and drink, and then rise Ex. 32. 6.
up to play ; and when they can play and live no longer, to die, ^ ^^^^ ^'^'
and there an end with them. Yet that end will be to die in 17.
252 Our Lord's resurrection foretold
s E R M. their sins ; for if Christ be not dead and risen for them, to
'— put a new Hfe into them before they die, needs must they
perish in them and be no better than dead men while they
seem to be ahve. All is thereafter as the resurrection is,
here and licreafter ; as we shall see anon.
For this piu'pose we are referred here to the Scriptures ;
wherein we may perceive as much as they, that refer to
them, saw with their own eyes ; for we have the same Scrip-
tures that they had, and their own besides. For if now we
should be asked the question, what Scriptures those be? it
would behove us all to be ready for an answer : and for the
more readiness, the Apostles, after they once understood
them, have pointed them out to us, as I believe Christ Him-
self, now after He was risen from the dead, did to them.
And it was well they did so. For otherwise we might
have been to look at this day, as the Jews yet are, what to
make of many prophetical passages in the Old Testament,
which are now made manifest and clear to us in the New.
When we took our former text here, the last day, out of
St. Paul, we reflected upon three of those passages already ;
one out of jNIoses, in capite libri, in the beginning of his
volume, and we applied it to the resurrection itself. The
two other, out of the Psalms and tlie Prophets, in cor pore
libri, and we applied them to the time of the resurrection,
that Christ was to rise again the third day, and not to stay
a day longer than His time. We shaU not go over those
places any more ; but the books themselves, in some other
places, that are for this purpose recorded in them, we are
noAV to go over again.
It is said in a place that Christ began at Moses, and so
Lu. 2 1. 27. must we ; for jSIoses is the fountain and the ocean from
w^hence all the rest of the Prophets drew their waters of hfe.
To begin then with him.
I. Besides these words that I mentioned last, to have
been set in cajnte libri, for antiquity the first, and for
majesty the greatest that ever were, we are referred by these
two very Apostles here, that came now from Christ^s grave,
and afterAvards preached up His resurrection in the tliird
chapter of their Acts, to that l)ook of Moses again, and there
vcr. ij,2.5. to that promise made to Abraham, that in his seed all the
in the Old Testament. 253
nations of the earth sliouhl be blessed ; to this promise, for
a clear proof and ])roi)hecy of Christ's rising to immortality.
A prophecy that the Jew, or any worldly man besides with all
the temporal blessings that they look for, can never tell what
to make of; but the Christian can; to whom it is said, that
after Christ had overcome the sharpness of death, He opened
His blessed kingdom to all believers, Tliat did He at His
resurrection. But for the opening of which blessed kingdom
it had gone hard with Abraham, and with all the nations of
the earth besides ; nor had the promise then made of bless-
ing him and his seed for ever, been any true blessing at all.
(2.) For secondly, it was no sooner made to him, but all
the seed he had, by that promise, then alive, Avas destined
and called for away to a present death ; the sacrifice of his
son, his only son Isaac. Therefore, here the Apostle
disputes and challenges Jew, and Gentile, and all the world,
to answer him. In Isaac was it said that all the nations of
the earth should be blessed ; yet in Isaac himself were they
never blessed, no more than they were in Abraham, or in all Hcb. ii.
his posterity besides, till Christ came. Who was the seed of ^'^'
Abraham indeed ; and being blessed for ever Himself, ex-
tended that blessing not only to Abraham, but to all the
true sons of Abraham for ever, and so made good the
promise.
This did He at His resurrection, Avhich was the end, the
fulfilling of that promise. For Abraham had it in a type,
saith St. Paul, when he received his son from death in a
figure. If the figure went before, the verity of that figure Heb. 11.
must of necessity follow after; for, as Tertullian says, ration- ^^'
ally and truly, speaking of the Sacrament and of this mystery
together, fiyiira est sempei^ figura veritatis ^ ; there is no
figure or shadow without a true substance with it, but that
truth never came out of the shadow, to be manifestly true,
till Christ Himself came. Who was the truth, and the life of
all things. And this in His rising to life out of death itself,
^ Figura autem non fuisset, nisi ibus liaut necesse est, quia nihil potest
veritatis esset corpus. Tertull. adv. ad similitudinem de suo praestare, nisi
Marc, lib. iv. cap. 40. The index to sit ipsum quod tali similitudine praestet.
the edition of Rigaltius (fol. Par. But nothing corresponding to this
1C64) has the following entry, which sentiment is found on the page (p. 247.)
has reference, apparently, to a similar to which reference is made,
passage: Figurae ex rebus consistent-
254 Isaac a type of our Saviour.
s E R ]\i. after He had been made a sacrifice upon the cross^ as Isaac
^^^^^' should have been, and was made in a type, upon the Mount^.
When we meet with his story, peradventm*e some of us
run through it too fast. Shall we stay a little and look upon
it, to see how even the parallel lines of it are laid to those
of Christ ?
(1.) First, for their persons. They were both the sons,
and the only sons, and the only beloved sons of their fathers ;
yet both determined to be put to death ; alike in that,
(2.) Then in their obedience to either. They were both
willing to be offered up for a sacrifice, and to die, obedientes
Phil. 2. 8. facti bisque ad mortem ; alike too in that.
(3.) And in the manner of it alike. They were both of
Gen. 22. 9. them bound for it.
Joh. 18.24. ^^ ■J rpj^g wood whcreupon they were to be sacrificed was
Joh. 19.17! laid upon both their shoulders'^.
Gen. 22. 2. (5.) They were either of them led away to the mount, and
Lu. 2;j. 33. ^Q the same mount both; for mount Calvary and mount
Moriali were but one and the same place ^.
(6.) Then Avhat was the ram that came thither in the
thorns, and Avas offered up to sav^e Isaac's life, but the figure
and pledge of Him That came forth with the crown of thorns,
and offered up Himself to save ours^?
(7.) And lastly, the release of them both, which was the
figure of the resurrection in Isaac's storj^, and is there seldom
taken notice of, fell out to be either of them upon the third
day. Which circumstance of time set forth for Isaac, needed
not to have been mentioned there at all, unless it had referred
here to Christ, that they might every way agree^.
* See Willet's Hexapla in Genesin, Civit. Dei, lib. xvi. cap. 22, 0pp., vii.
p. 234, fol. Lond. 1608, and Pearson 336. and in Psahn. xxx.; 0pp., torn. iv.
on the Creed, vol. ii. p. 92. edit. 1821. 119, et viii. 524. S. Jerome in cap. 15.
^ Isaac, cum a patre hostia duce- Marci, torn. iv. p. 919. edit. Bened.
retur, lignumque ipse sibi portaret, 1706.
Christi exituni jam tunc denotabat, in ' Haec pars Dominicse passionis prs-
victimam concessi a Patre, lignum pas- figurata fuit in typo arietis in dumeto
sionis suae bajulantis. Tertull. adv. spinoso pendentis, quem Abraham loco
Juda-'os, cap. 10 ; 0pp., torn. iv. p. 316. filii sui Isaaci in holocaustum Deo
ed. Gersd. obtulit. Gerli. Harm. Evang., cap. 194.
e Hieronynius scripsit ab antiquis et toni. iii. p. 1909.
senioribus .Iud;fiis se certissime cogno- K Typi illius tridui potissimum tres
visse quod ibi immolatus sit Isaac ubi sunt. Isaacus in tertium usque diem
postea Christus crucifixus est S. Au- cum parente abit ad niontem Moria
gust. Serm. 71. de Temp. See also de jussu Dei sacriiicandus, ubi in oculis
The Psalms predict the resurrection. 255
And so much for what was written of Ilim in the volume
of that book ; which^ as St. Austin says rightly^ is nothing
else but a perpetual prophecy of Christ''. This and all the
rest which pass under the name of Moses.
II. The next book we are sent to is the book of the Psalms.
St. Peter sends us to two of them, and St. Paul to a tliird ; I
will mention no more.
And of St. Peter's two we have made one clear already. Acts 2. 27,
It was the sixteenth Psalm, that which we call the Psalm of '
the Resurrection', where the patriarch David, that saw cor- ver. 10.
ruption himself and is still detained under it, prophesied of
Christ That saw none, and was never corrupted in His grave
at all. For there we found it to be all one, not to see cor-
ruption, and not to be above three days dead ; at which time
naturally we see every dead body corrupt ; but so did not
Christ's, "WTiose body was risen and alive again before that
time of corruj)tion came.
The other of St. Peter's psalms is of the stone Avhich the Ps.]i8.22.
builders cast away, and which God took up and made the ^'^ ' '
head stone of the corner; never made good but by the death
and the resurrection of Christ. For at the one they hacked
and hewed Him like a stone, they threw Him aside and trod
upon Him like a stone ; but Avithin a few days after, at the
other, He was taken up again and set in the very head of the
building, which made Him the head and the only head of His
Church ever since. A title that some others have of late
times adventured to take upon themselves, but the Scrip-
tures reserve it only to Him ; and they that are not for the
right head are not for Christ. In effect, they would not
have Him yet risen. There is another psalm of the passion, Ps. 22. is.
where they parted His garments among them ; but the end
of that psalm is, that He will call them to an account for all, ver. 27, 28,
and in Plis time shew that He is risen indeed, however they ^^'
patris fuit velut mortuus, sed tertio die Christo, in isto Psalmo proplietiam
vivificatur cum aries ipsius loco immo- de lllo contineri admirandam, tan-
latur. Gerli. Harm. Evang., torn. iii. p. quam in columna incisam et per-
2093. petua scriptura dignam, potissimum
■• Qnaere quid sit. Figura est Christi de triumpho mortis ac resurrectionis
involutaSacramentis. S. August. 0pp., Ejus. Lorin. in Psalm., torn. i. p. 195.
tom. iv. col. 119. See also Hammond on the Psalms, p.
' GroecienarratoresLatinique.maxime 77. edit. 1659, and Pearson on the
veteres, consentiuut interpretando de Creed, vol. ii. p. 91. edit. 1821.
25G The passage from the second Psalm examined.
s E R M. use Him now, as if He lay dead still iu His sepulchre. These
^^"^- were St. Peter's psalms.
Besides these, there was a proof made by St. Paul of the
ver. 7. resurrection of Christ out of the second Psalm, when he
Actsi3.33. pj.(,j^(,]jg(j i^jg fli-g^ sermon at Antiocli. He tells them there,
that God had fulfilled His promise, in that He had raised up
His Son from the dead ; as it is written in the second Psalm,
' Thoii art ISIy Sou, this day have I begotten Thee.'
What makes that to the resurrection, wliich a man would
think were a text rather belonging to the nativity at Christ-
mas, than to the resiu'rectiou at Easter ?
But it was au Easter-day psalm with St, Paul, and so was
it here with us ; it was appointed for the day ^.
And indeed there is no applying of that Psalm to any but
to Christ, nor to Christ at any other time so properly as
this.
For who was He That had the heathen there given Him for
His inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for His
possession, but Christ ? It could not be king David himself,
that, for he never had any such possession given him ; nor
he, nor any other. But He, that being, as He was, the Son
of God, became afterwards to be the Son and the Lord of
Mat.'28.i8. king David himself; of Him, and of all the kings and powers
of the earth, at this very time when He said all power in
heaven and earth was given Him, and that was immediately
after His resurrection, Avhen He sent out His Apostles to
take possession of it in the Avorld. At this time was He
made the King's Son, and set up over His OAvn inheritance.
The sons of men have since that time, as they make account
at least, got a good part of it to themselves ; but their in-
heritance is one thing, and His is another.
Pa. 2. 7. So are their generations too, that we may not be troubled
here at that expression, ' This day have I begotten thee.*
For there are two begettings, and two several nativities; one
to this life here below, in which we must die ; another to
the life above, in which we shall never die; and to this latter
life was Christ now begotten, after His death to the first.
The reason that the ancient Church called their martvi'S
'' This Psalm is appointed for Morn- the fitness of its adaptation, see Lorin.
ing Service upon Easter daj'. Upon in Psahn., toni. i. p. 2 K
Prophecies concerniiiy our Saviour. 2i)7
clays ' natalitia martyrum, that is, tlic days of their nativities ;
wherein though they lost oue life, yet they were begotten
and born to another far better than the former. And this
for the book of Psalms.
3. The books of the prophets that follow are full to this
purpose. I will but name three of them, and stay at the
fourth.
Daniel ; he foretells the precise time both of Christ's death, Dan. 9. 24,
and of His return from death ; of the Messias by name, and "^' '
that this was His time.
Zachary says that they should see Him alive, Whom they Zadi. i?.
had pierced to death ; applied by St. John here to the person gH'''^''' "'•
of Clmst.
Hosea is clear, ' After two days He will return, and the Hos. fi 2.
third day rise up and ransom us ;' which St. Paul applies to
Christ's rising from the dead.
But I stay upon the prophet Isaiah, the clearest of them
all. There was a man of Ethiopia that was reading of him Acts 8. 27.
in his chariot, and the place he read was a prophecy of
Christ's passion, which endetli there in His resurrection ;
that place alone converted him and made him a Christian.
He was brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and for the sins Isa. .3:5. 7,
of my people was He slain ; and there it ends not, but after-
wards. He was taken out of His prison and came forth from
His sepulchre like a conqueror from the field : which was so
clear a prophecy of Christ, that six hundred years ™ before
He came^ the prophet speaks of Him as if he had then seen
Him rising before his eyes. For first, he asks the question, i^sa. (53. 1,
Who is this that cometh, so glorious in His gait, so beautiful
in His garments ? And then he answers it. Behold, here \ er. 8.
comes your Sa\'iour, Avith the keys of Edom and Bozra, that
is, of death and hell both ", at His girdle. A text in Isaiah,
which if Isaiah were not named, might be rather taken for a
story penned by one of the evangelists than for a prediction
made by one of the prophets ; so like a story it looks of a
thing then past, or present, and not like a prophecy of any
' See Bingham xx. 7. § 2 ; and J. B. C. 712.
Hildebrand de Natalitiis Martyrum, " See Alvarez in Isaiam, torn, ii,
4to. Helmst. 1661. col. 1225, 1226, fol. Lugd. 1623.
'" According to Ussher's chronology,
COSIN. g
258 Christ must rise from the dead.
s E R i\i. thius; then to come so many affcs after. But this manner of
XVIII . '
'- penning these prophecies made them the surer ; and tliere
is nothing so great a ^tuy to onr faith and rehgion that we
have for Christ, than that those things which we profess to
beheve of Him we find to he so plainly foretold so many years
before they came to pass.
To which therefore St. John here refers both St. Peter, and
himself, and all of us together ; that both they might believe
the Scriptures better than their OAvn eyes, as being the
clearer evidence and the surer i)roof of the two ; and that
we, who were to come after them, having the same Scriptures
that they had, might be as sure as they, and believe as they
did ; ever remembering that, as the Angel told him, the
Rev.19.10. testimony of Jesus is the sure spirit of prophecy. And so I
have done with these Scriptures, the ground of our faith and
the certainty of this truth, that Christ is risen.
II. The necessity of it is yet behind, which I will despatch
in a word, that we may apply both to ourselves.
It is said here, that Christ must rise from the dead. He
Mat. 3. 15. had said so before Himself, Quia sic oportuit impleri omnem
' justitiam, that it behoved Him both to die and to rise again,
or otherwise God's justice must never have been satisfied.
For neither we, nor all the world besides, were able to do
that ; so that done it must be, or we must have been all
undone, one of these two.
That 'must' troubles the Socinian, — which is a new sect
that now troubles the world abroad, and says that there
was no such necessity to satisfy God's justice at all, either
by Christ's death or by Christ's rising ". They deny Clu'ist's
Trobabiy : satisfaction, and say there was no need of it. Byhke ' they
son, v. Be- <3ither know how to satisfy for themselves, (as some others
like. are taught to do, that may not wholly rely upon Christ ; but
they are of another division,) or else they know not the
Scriptures, which yet they pretend to do above all people
living. It should seem that among the rest they leaped
over this, as their manner is to flv at some one, and leave
o From a careful examination of the ncc debuit nee potuit satisfacere, nee
Socinian writers, Sclierzer collects and jieccata nostra expiavit, nee Deum
proves that they maintained tliis thesis, nobis reconciliavit.' See Colleg. Anti-
' Christus morte sua justitiae divinas Socin., p. t'iS. edit. Lips. 1672.
Justice is one of God's essential attributes. 259
ten behind tliem. But all they have to say is, that God
will do it some other way ; ex p/enitudine potestatis, or ex
plenitudine misericordice ; either by His absolute power, or
by His absolute goodness, because His poAver and mercy are Ps. i lo. 9.
over all Ilis works.
As if there had been no way at all for mercy and justice
to meet and so to stand together ; as if there were ever any
greater power and mercy shewed, than in this way of satis-
fying God's justice by the death and resurrection of His
Son ! For as we must ever acknowledge His mercy in all
things, so must we never deny Him His justice in any thing,
which is every way as essential to Him as His mercy is ;
otherwise they rob God of one of His attributes. Who can
neither quit His justice nor Avaive His truth, and when
justice comes once to claim her own of them, if they find it
not then in manu Mediatoi^is, if they chance to meet it then Gal. 3. 19.
out of Christ's hands, they had better meet a lion in their
way, to devour and tear them in pieces.
The truth is, there is no other way either to appease that
justice of God, or to quiet any man's conscience, than this
way alone, this way of necessity, that the Scriptures have
here laid upon Christ. And there we rest.
There is another question here moved by these men,
whether Christ raised Himself or no p, in that it is said in
another place, that God raised Him. But let not that Rom. «. 4.
trouble us, for He was God Himself, and there are not two
Gods ; there was but the same Deity, and the same power in
either Person. And here we rest again in the Scriptures
and in Him, that we may now come to ourselves, and ask
what all these Scriptures and this resurrection of Christ will
teach us.
Multum per omnem modum, says the Apostle, much and Rom. .3. 2.
many ways they will do it.
(1.) First to confirm and strengthen our faith, that herein
we were not born to inherit and believe a lie, as some other
people of the world are in following their own fond and
P The Racovian Catechism asserts, Wishing the same assertion is collected.
Fallnntur vehementer qui aiunt Chris- See S. August. Opp., tom. v. col. 8(i3,
turn seipsmn a mortuis excitasse; see and tom. iv. col. 2(J4, 398 et 918, and
Scherzer, Colleg. Anti-Socin., p. 549, Pearson on the Creed, vol. ii. p. 97.
wliere a host of other authorities esta- edit. 1821.
s 2
260 The doctrine of Christ's resurrection
S E R M. groundless courses of religion, but tliat we rest upon certain
'— and undoubted truths, built upon the foundation of the
prophets and Apostles, grounded upon the evidence of
Scripture, upon reason, upon justice, and upon many
Avitnesses here besides. AVhich rule if it might be followed
in all other matters of religion, as indeed it ought to be,
and was here in this, wc should have more unity and less
contention in the world about them than there is.
(2.) Secondly, that He in Whom we believe, and the
Rom. 1. 4-. Scriptures in which we trust, have hereby declai'ed Him to
be the Son of the everliving God, even by the resurrection
from the dead ; the Apostle's own w ords. For in His djnng
He was declared to be the son of man, without which He
might never have died ; but in His rising again He was set
forth to be what He was, the eternal Son of the Most High
God, w ithout Avhicli He could never have made perfect our
redemption.
For if our faith had gone no further than that He died
only, and no more, the Jews and the very pagans themselves
will confess as much of Him as that, etiam j^agani credunt
mortuum esse Christian, they will believe Him to be dead, as
they believe it of their own special men, of their own Avhom
they set up to be worshipped ; sed resurrexisse vivum, to be-
lieve that He is alive and risen again to glory, kcec est fides
Christianorum propria, this is the only true faith and character
of a true Christian, as St. Austin^ rightly tells them; it can be
said b}-- none but Christ, and challenges all the world to shew
it of another. Since His time there are some Christians
arisen that have made bold to believe it of another, we know
who, but it is a peculiar faith that, by themselves, and a
groundless, wdiereby they have degenerated not a little from
the proper and universal Catholic faith of a Christian, which
never yet believed it of au}^ but of Christ, and holds it to be
no good sign of a true Christian indeed to let any creature
whatsoever, either among the sons or the daughters of
Abraham, entercommon with Him in His glory. This for
our faith iu Him to confirm that.
"5 Mortuum (juippe Christum ct pa- S. August, contra Faustum, lib. xvi.
gaiii credunt; resurrexisse autemCliris- cap. 29. 0pp., torn. viii. col. 215.
turn propria fides est Christianorum.
strengthens our fait ?i and hope, 261
Then for our hope in Ilim, to establish that. The na-
ture of hope is to expel fear ; and of this hope to expel the
fear of death or the grave. For thus we plead ; if Ciirist be
risen, we shall rise ; if He be risen in our nature, as sure He
is, then may oiu* nature rise sure enough ; and if oiu' nature
may rise, as it did in Him, then is there no fear but our
persons may rise also, as His did.
For lo ! here comes your Saviour, as Isaiah said of Him, is. fi;3. i.
when he saw Him coming from the regions of death. And
being already eome from thence Himself, He will never leave
those behind Him there to be lost, for whom and for whose
sakes alone, He went thither; Ijut if He suffers us to be
carried to our graves. He will see us safely In'ought out from
them again, and never part with us when all the world be-
sides leaves us. Which is the only chief comfort we shall
have against the fear of death, when we shall come, as once
we must all do, to die ourselves.
Then we plead again, if Christ be the head of His Church,
as there is no other, then is St. Gregoiy's reason a good one,
cum caput vidimus super aquas, when the head be kept above
the waters, the body that belonged to it, though in the
meanwhile men see it not, is safe enough. And St. Paul's is i Cor. ii
better ; Christ is but the first-fruits of them that sleep, two " "
reasons in one; if they do but sleep they shall do well
enough, they may awake again from their sleep ; and if He
be but the first-fruits, the rest are a part of those fruits, in
their own due season to follow.
It is but symbolical divinity this; but it illustrates well, i <"or. 1.5.
The rational is that, as by Adam, Avhose sons we are, we all "
die, because he is dead, so by Christ, Whose sons we are too,
we shall be restored to life, because He is risen from the
dead. For we are parties now, no less to the one than we
are to the other. And herein is our hope laid up for us
against the time to come.
Indeed our other hopes here below do many times deceive
us, but it is not' long of hope that, it is long of ourselves, Ms not
who lay our hope upon a wrong object, and there anchor in ' l^l.i'"",^''
a storm that pulls it up and carries it aAvay, in the uncertain, iid,. «. 19.
transitory, and perishing things of this life. Lay it where it
should be laid, in those things that belong to a better life,
and it will never fail us.
262 and ought to influence our conversation.
S E R M. There is no better achice in this case than that which
-^ '- St. Austin gives ; si vis esse Christianns, if you Avill be counted
a good Christian, live so as you may live in hope of having
such a resurrection as Christ had ; et propter hoc esto quod es,
that is, and for this hope's sake, be and cany yourself like
a Christian, like one that bears His name and waits for His
coming. Which is a good lesson now to make an end withal ;
and so I have done with this text.
Whereof the Sacrament, that we are now going to, is a
lively symbol: for here we shall find Christ's death and
resurrection presented to us again. To enjoy the true fruit
and benefit whereof, we are thither to bring our own death
and resurrection with us, a death to our deadly sins, we know
every one what our own be, and a resurrection to our new
life, we are none of us ignorant Avhat that should be. St. John
Rev.20. 5, calls it the first resurrection, which will open us a door of
hope for the second, that that may be for the better and not
for the worse ; for be it will howsoever ; but when it is, God
send it for the best. To Whom be all honour and glory, now
and for evermore. Amen.
SERMON XIX.
PARIS, MAY 21, 1651. [new STYLK]
DOMINICA POST ASCENSIONEM.
Acts i. 9, 10, 11.
Et luec locutus, v'tdentibus iisdem, in altwn suhlatus est, <^r.
Et ecce ! duo viri ast'derimt illis in vestibus albis.
And ivhen He had spoken these things, while they beheld. He
was taken up ; and a cloud received Him out of their sight.
And ivhile theij looked steadfastly toioard heaven as He went
uj), behold two men stood by them in white apparel.
Which also said, Ye men of Galilee, tvhy stand ye looking up
into heaven ? This same Jesus, Who is taken up from you
into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen
Him go into heaven.
This is the first Sunday, and this was the first sermon
after Christ's ascension ; which being so great a feast in the
Clu'istians' calendar, and so high, so necessary an article in
their creed, we were not Milling to pass it by, but have taken
this day, the nearest to it that is, and this text, the clearest
for it that is, to set it forth.
It consists of three verses ; and in these three verses there
be three parties, that will divide the text into three parts.
Christ is the first ; and the two other are, secondly. His
Apostles, and thirdly, Ilis Angels ; both whom He took here
to be His Avitnesses that He was taken up into heaven.
W,e will see what was said, and what was done about it by
them all.
264 The division of the subject.
S E R M. 1. Here was somewliat, first, that Christ had said, et cum
XIX
'— h(EC locutus, the last words He spake here upon the eartli be-
fore He ascended into heaven; and tlien here is the ascension
itself; the verity of it, that so it was ; and the majesty of it,
that never was the like. These three for Him.
2. Next, here is, videntibus ApostoUs, that they stood by
and looked on till thev could look no lon";er, I should sav till
they could see no longer; for when they saw Him not, when
a cloud had received Him, and hid Him out of their sight, yet
they looked after Him still.
3. Then follows the Angels' part; their appearing, and
their speech. Their appearing, in the second verse, ' Behold
two men stood by them in white apparel.' Their speech, or
their sermon, in the last, ' Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye
looking up into heaven,' &c.
Of which sermon there be three heads. First, viri Galilai,
that they call the Apostles by that name and no other, ' men
of Galilee.' Second, quid stntis aspicientes ? that they recall
them for the present from looking after Christ with their
corporal eyes any longer; 'Why stand ye looking up into
heaven?' and thirdly, Hie, Qui assumptus est, sic veniet ; that
they instruct them what to look for hereafter ; gone though
He be, yet the time will come that the world shall hear of
Him again.
And of these that we may, &c.
Pater Noster, i^c. '
I. Et cum ?i(EC locutus. 'When He had spoken these
things.' And 'these things' refer to the last words that Christ
spake to them upon the earth, the more to be taken notice
of for that. He tells His Apostles here, in the verse before,
that the power of the Holy Ghost should come upon them,
as it did at Pentecost, the next feast to come. And that
they should be His witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in
Samaria, and unto the uttermost parts of the earth. And
so they were, all in that order that He here had set it.
There was not a word of these His last words lost.
Acts 8. .5. For first, they went to Jerusalem ; next, as we see in this
book, to Samaria, then to other parts of the world. But first,
Jerusalem the mother Church. 2G5
tliey went to Jerusalem, and bare witness of llini there.
There they settled the mother Church ; omnium Ecdesiurum
matrem, as one of the first general councils called it'% and as
Christ here had spcciall}' commanded it more than once. I
wonder where some other men since, fifteen hundred years
after this, got any power to reverse that command, and to
damn'' all the world, for so they do, who will not now make
it a new article of their faith that they are the mother Church,
and the mistress of all other Churches upon the earth ; and
this, whether Christ or His Apostles will, or no; for they
began at Jerusalem, made that the mother Church.
And the faith that they here preached they carried next to
Samaria, and from thence to the ends of the Avorld ; from Arts s. 5.
whence we have it now, the same faith and religion that jy '
Christ, by His last words, here sent them to preach ; we are
bound to no other. And that was as St. Luke sets it down Acts 1. !•,
here before, and St. INIatthew before him, the last words that ' ' *■ •
Christ spake there too, teaching all people to observe and to Mat. 28.
do whatsoever He had commanded them. They that would ^' ^*''
teach us any other matter of religion than the Apostles did,
must first shew us a better evidence for it than the Apostles
here had.
All the evidence thev bring is from the third verse here Acts 1. 3.
above ; where because it is said that Christ after His resur-
rection had been forty days together with His disciples,
speaking to them of the things pertaining to the kingdom
of God, — Avhieh they say were never after written in the
New Testament, — they must needs have them to be the very
same things that they themselves have written or taught by
tradition, which we say they never yet made good, nor
never wilP.
* PoiTo Ecclesiae Hierosolymitanas, § 8. edit. Lond. 1G17, and Walcli, Hist.
qnas est aliarum omnium mater, rave- Eccl. N. T. p. 355. edit. Jenas, 1744,
rendissimuin et sanctissimum Cyrillum where additional proofs are cited,
episcopixm vobis ostendimus, tum ab ** One of the additional Tridentine
episcopis provincise, uti canon vult, articles added by pope Pius to tlie Creed,
jampridem creatuni esse, tum plurima makes adherence to the see of Rome
proeiia adversus Arianos variis in locis an article ' de fide.'
confecisse. Epistola episcoporum con- '^ See Bellarm. de Verbo Dei non
cilii Constantinop. ii. ad Damasum scripto, lib. iv. cap. 5. § Constat igifiir ;
papam, in Binii Cone, torn. i. p. 087- Tanner Theolog. Scholast., foni. lii.
edit. Par. 1636. See also Ant. de disp. 1. q. '>. dub. 3. 12. 97.
Dominis de Repub. Eccl., lib. iv. cap. 3.
2G6 Acts 1. 3. explained.
s E R M. For, first, Christ Himself is against it, Who had told them
■ before expressly, in the seventeenth chapter of St. John, that
ver. 8.14.
all the things He had heard of God, His Father, He had
made known to them already ; so that such things as be said
here to pertain to the kingdom of God, they did l)ut pertain
to those things whereof He had spoken before ; they were no
new and different things from the former: for then the
former had not been all.
1 .Toll. ] . -6. And the Apostles are against it. ' What we have heard
and seen, that do we declare and write unto you,' speak for
matter of faith and religion, necessary to be imposed upon all
men. And what thev declared and wrote not to others, a
sure rule it is, that they neither saw it, nor heard it from
Clmst; neither they from Christ, nor others from them,
who, as St. Paul speaks in this book, had not failed in any
Acts 20. thing to set forth the whole counsel of God concerning those
97
things that pertained to His kingdom.
And therefore St. Austin had great reason to declare him-
self, as he does, against those men that took their advantage
and made as ill use of these words in his time, as some men
do now in ours, calling all others heretics who will not make
the same use of them that they do themselves. And these
97. in edit, men he altogether condemns in his ninety-sixth Tract '^ upon
eiiecict. g^ JqIj^ j^ jg remarkable, and concerns a matter of fact.
Omnium vero insipientissimi hcei'etici, of all other he calls
them the worst, qui se Christianos vocari volunt, that call
themselves Christians, et tamen fiymenta sua hac occasione
Evange1ic(B sententice colorare conantur, and yet take their
occasion from these words to vent and colour over their own
fictions. Quid enim aliud sunt nisi fiymenta, cum Script ura
Christi ea tacuerit ? for what are they else but the fancies of
men, when we read them not in the Scriptures of Christ?
Aut quis nostrum dicat hcec vel ilia sunt, aid si dicere audeat,
unde probet ? Who can say that Christ ever spake those
things which these men speak, or if they be so bold as to
say it themselves, how will tliey prove it ? and concludes
^ Omnesautem insipientissimi haere- conantur, ubi Doniinus ait, Adhuc
tici, qui se Christianos vocari volunt, mulla Imhco vohis dicere, scd nou potestis
audacias figmentorum suoruni, quas port arc modo S. August. 0pp., toui.
maxime exponet sei\sus liunianus, ouca- iii. p. 2. p. 5.37.
sione Evangelictc sentcntia' colorare
Tlie ascension foretold by the prophets. 2G7
tlicm to be no other tlifin rash and vain persons, qui sine
testimonio divino, quando dLverhd qiue ipsi voluerint, dicunt ea
esse qua Christus dicere volebat ; who first say what they will
themselves, and then Avitliout any testimony of divine Scrip-
ture to shew for it, say that they had it from Christ, or that
He ever said any such things before them.
This is St. Austin's discourse against them that took
advantage of these words in St. Luke. It is but a matter of
fact that I cite them for, to let you see from whence some
other men of late, that take advantage of the same words
against us too, had their first pattern; for from Christ's
Avords here they have it not; neither His first words, nor
His last.
And so much for haec locutus.
II. Et cum h(2C locutus, sublatus est in altuni. After the
last words that He spake before He ascended, follows the
ascension itself.
' And when He had spoken these things, Avhile they beheld,
He was taken up, and a cloud received Him out of their
sight.'
For the truth whereof, as we have many prophecies in the
Old Testament, prophecies and types ^ both, — which the
Church set forth in her' service upon Ascension day, three
days since we had them, I will not trouble you with them
now, — so have we the performance of them all here in the
New.
The prophets, they saw it in vision and told of it before it
came. The Apostles, they saw it with their eyes, testes ocidati,
and bare witness to it when it was past. So comes it down
to us. And in the mouth of these two witnesses is every Dcut. 17.
truth that we believe estabhshed among us. I say, these ^J^ '^j^'"-
two, the New Testament and the Old ; for Christ neither did
nor taught any thing in the one, but what was foretaught
and told of Him in the other; nor can there be a surer hold
or a greater stay to our faith, than these two thus joined
together as they are ; than that those things which we believe
of Christ by the testimony of His Apostles, should be so
plainly set forth by the testimony of His prophets so many
" See these well summed up In* ' In the proper rsa'ms and First
Gerhard. Harm. Evang., torn. iii. p. Lessons appointed for that day.
1273.
2G8 Correspondence of the glory of the ascension
s E R M. ages before tliev came to pass. For this can Ije iiotliina; else
-^— but the power of God ; Who challengeth all the world to shew
the like two such witnesses as these two be.
I should not so much urge the truth of this story, and the
grounds whereupon we believe it, — for it is a disparagement
to our Christian faith to think tliat any Christian does not
believe it, — but that we are fallen now into such times,
wherein if we hold not the faster to these two grounds of
belief, we shall be in danger to lose all and believe nothing ;
the impostures of the Avorld ha^dng been so many, among
them that have been taught to believe them upon any other
ground, that the truths themselves, such as this is, which
they did believe before, can scarce find now any firm credit
with them at all. And all for want of this foundation of the
prophets and Apostles, than which there is no firm ground
at all to believe any thing.
That foundation laid, we may come the better to look upon
all the passages that are here and elsewhere set forth in this
story, this truth, this miracle of Christ's ascension. I will
pass over them briefly.
1. And first, it was no withdrawing of Himself out of the
Avay, no vanishing out of their sight to some other place here
iMnrk ^5. 7. below, as He had sometimes done before ; but a local, visible,
and real elevation of His l)ody into heaven.
Sublatus est in altum. So much we have in the first verse
of the text ; that He was taken up on high, the pitch of His
motion. And because in altum might be somewhat a doubt-
2 Kiiios 2. ful term, — if it had been but as the sons of the prophets
thought Elias had been taken up into some higher top among
the mountains, it had been in altum, that, — therefore how
high was it ? So high, as it is added here, till a cloud came
and took Him out of their sight. And what became of Him
then ? That the Angels supply, for though the Apostles could
see no farther, yet the Angels did. And they say that He
vcr. 11. was taken up into heaven; twice here repeated, that there
might be no doubt made of it. But after all these, St. Paul
takes the true altitude for us, when he says that He ascended
Epii. 1.10. far above all the heavens, that is, to the highest of them all,
there sitting at the right hand of (Jod. And now He is at
His full height.
with the humility of the incarnation. 269
That place iu St. Paul is in his fourth chapter to the
Ephcsians. And we mentioned it the rather, because it
keeps a just correspondence between Christ's ascending and
His descending; His going up here to heaven, and His
coming down hither to the earth; His highest and His
lowest. That lowest was ad ima terra', to the lowest parts of ver. 9.
the earth, to the lowest place, the lowest condition there of
any others, none beneath Him. This highest was ad summa
coeli, to the highest top of heaven, to the highest throne, the
highest state there of any others, none above Him. And
this latter made amends for the former ; His humility was
the merit of His glory, and His glory was the reward of His
humility.
For this cause He ascended out of the grave, at Easter,
from the gates of death, wherein lie was shut ; from the
jaws of death, whereunto He Avas taken; from the lowermost
and innermost rooms of death ; from the den and belly of the
whale, into which He was swallowed; out of all these He
ascended then, when He rose from the dead. But all these
brought Him uo higher than to the ascension of Jonas from
the bottom of the dungeon to the uppermost face of the
earth. Xow He comes to the ascension of Elias ; from earth
to heaven, from the lowest parts of the earth to the highest
place in heaven, from His De profundis then, to His In
excelsis now, from being laid under a stone, to sit at the right
hand of God ; and higher we cannot go.
This as it was much for His own ascent into His glorj", to
ascend thither as the Son of Man, — for as the Son of God in
that nature. He ascended not, That was always in glory before,
, — so makes it much for our hopes of ascending thither after
Him. Eor His being above before, before He was below,
that makes nothing to us, rather makes all against us ; but
His being below first, descending to the lowest condition of
men, and then in that condition going up, ascending to the
highest state of heaven, and carrpng our naturae thither with
Him, — this is that we hold by, and by nothing else. Eor if
the Son of Man be gone up, we have all hope that the sons
of men may get up thither after Him.
And so they may, saith the Apostle, if they take the same Phil. 3.11.
way to come thither, that He did ; Vfho in this, as in all
270 The circiwistances of the ascension.
S E R M. tilings else, is our pattern. Our hooks tell us that the Scrip-
^^^' ture will hear two senses, the literal and the morale ; make
use of it here. That to get high is first to become low ; to
learn that Christian virtue of Him, which is not to be learnt,
which is not to be seen, in all the philosopher's ethics, the
vii'tue of humility, a virtue that the world looks not after, puts
it out of all place ; but in heaven it sits at the highest.
Ascendit Lucifer et f actus est dia bolus, there was one in
that kingdom that would needs be getting up into the king's
throne ; and God threw him down to the bottom of hell,
made him a devil, and all his like high-minded rebels Mith
him.
Descendit Christus, et facfus est Caput Angelonim. He
that sat in a throne there Plimself, was content to leaA'e it ;
content to do a great deal more, to take upon Him the form
of a servant, the form of a malefactor, the form of humility ;
and in that form is brought to the throne again; in that
form exalted far above all principalities and powers. Quem
Acts 4. reproharunt, factus est Caput anyuVi. AVhich is St. Chiysos-
1 1 &C.
' ' tom's meditation upon Christ's ascension.
And now it is a good sight to behold Christ thus ascend-
ing to the heavens ; a better sight to see Him as an eagle in
the clouds than as a worm in the dust, for so thevused Him.
But thus God exalted Him. And so much for sublatus est in
altum.
2. Secondly, videntibus Apostolis, that the Apostles looked
on and saw it, that they might testify the truth of it and
make an article of the Creed of it, as thev did that went
before.
3. And thirdly, that a cloud came and took Him out of
their sight. That sets us but forward to look after somewhat
else, unless we will make this use of the cloud before we
part with it ; that it parts Christ's bodily presence clean from
2 Cor. 5. us ; that, as St. Paul said, if Christ was once known after
the flesh, yet now from henceforth we shall know Him so no
more. The cloud has removed Him from us. And if cither
St. Paul says true here, or St. Luke true here, the truth is,
8 Bellann. de Verbi Dei interpret. passage in his Loci Comin. Theologici,
lib. iii. cap. 3. § Ut igitiir. But see torn. i. p. 67. ed. Cotta?, 1702.
the criticisms of Gerhard upon this
l(j.
Christ's bodily presence why removed. 271
they arc but in a cloud still that fancy Ilis fleshly presence
to be still among them ; it is but a cloud in their own heads,
that, for Christ is where He should be ; this cloud has taken
His bodily and fleshly manner of being here, from among us
all. It is His spiritual presence that we must hold to now,
and that is as real a presence as any His body or His flesh
ever was, or ever can be.
And there is an adAantage got by it besides. For by His
corporal presence He could have been resident but in one
place at a time, never was otherwise ; as if He had been with
St. James at Jerusalem, He had not been at the same time
with St. John at Ephesus, or Avith St. Peter at Babylon, or
with St. Thomas at the Indies — but by His spiritual pre-
sence, which was to succeed the corporal, wheresoever they
were. He could be, and was, present with them all, and all at
a time, with all and every one by Himself. For by His
Spirit He can be every where, truly and really every Avhere,
where it pleaseth Him ; and so with us.
The corporal therefore was removed that the spiritual
might take place, the visible taken away that the imdsible
might follow ; and neither they, nor we, in sight and sense
as before, but in spirit and truth henceforth to cleave unto
Him. For which piu'pose we have still a pentecost to come
after an ascension, and to put us all in mind of it.
This will make us say, Avhen we can see Him no longer
for the cloud, as we said here the other day in the Psalm of
ascension, 'Good Lord, set up Thyself above the heavens, and
Thy glory above all the earth ^\' Let Him be where He is,
we shall lose nothing by it.
III. And now we come from the Apostles to the Angels,
to see w^hat they do here ; what they do, and what thej'^ say.
WTien the Apostle tells us that Christ was received up i Tim. 3.
into glor}^, he tells us there in the same period that He was
seen of Angels.
Here they are said to be two men in white apparel. Let
not that trouble us ; St. Paul took them to be Angels, and
from Him all Christians have taken them to be so ever since ;
there was never any of them understood this place to be
^ Ps. 57. 6. One of the proper Psalms for Mattins on Easter day.
272 The Angels' exhortation to the Apostles.
s E R M. meant of any other. So here we have men and Angels
— ^ — 1-1— brought together, to wait upon Christ's ascension.
When God first brouglit His Son into tlie world, the same
Heb. 1. (J. Apostle says, it was then said, Let the Angels of God come
down and worship Him ; and so they did. And when God
here carries His Son out of the world, they come down to
worship Ilim again; for as He is the Son of man. He is
Lord both of men and Angels.
But Christ is gone up and the Angels stay still below, they
have somewhat to teach the disciples bcfoi-e they go up after
Him, and by them to learn us before they leave them.
1 . First, they stood by them ; and it was no little honour
to the Apostles, this, and to the religion which they preached
to us, that they had these blessed spirits, the Angels, to
assist them, as they had many and divers times after
besides. When that religion was once preached to the
world, the Angels appeared no more, their work and their
errand was done ; and now we are to hold us to those records
that we have of them. They who at any time have set up
another religion in the world than the Apostles did, let them
shew that ever they got a true Angel to them.
2. They stood by them in white ajiparel; which was a
symbol not only of their own purity, and integrity of tlieii"
nature, but of their joy and triumph likewise, that was made
both by them and by all their fellow-Angels in heaven for the
coming up of Christ, the Sou of God and man, thither.
3. They are here said to be but two. It must be meant
of those two that stayed behind with the Apostles, that. For
Ps. 68. 17. otherwise the Scripture is clear, that Christ had twenty
thousand of them ; that is. Angels without number, to
attend upon Him. The chariots of God are twenty thousand,
and thousands of Angels in them all, when He ascended up
on high. That Scripture in the Psalm prophesied of this in
St. Luke.
4. They are said to appear here in the form of men. I
wish that this might not trouble you. A good Angel never
yet appeared in any other form ; and in some external form
or other they must appear to the Apostles, or else the
Apostles, that were men themselves, could never have seen
them. ]\Ien see no spirits, as they are spirits ; there is no
The Apostles, ivhy addressed as ' men of Galilee.' 273
proportion between them, tliey converse not in that manner
"with them.
But yet if they be Angels, why are they not called
Angels ? why are they said to be men ? Here St. Austin's '
rule will serve for this, and for many a case besides. He
gives it in the Sacraments, In divinis Scripturis sacramenta
earum rerum nomina sortiuntar, quaruni sunt similitudines.
The Sacraments in the Holy Scriptures have the names of
those things given them, of Avhich things they are but simili-
tudes;— he adds, and so do we, — but such similitudes as
carry their truth always with them. And thus was it here.
These men were but the similitudes of men, but those simili-
tudes had the true persons of Angels with them.
V. Then fifthly, now we see what they are, let us hear
what they say.
' A^Tio also said. Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye looking
into heaven?^
1. First, they call them Viri GaUlcEi, and this to put them
in mind both from whence they came, and whither they were Mat.2f).32.
to go.
To Galilee not long since had Christ gone before them. Mat. 28. 7.
There, after His resurrection He gave them His precepts, '^^'^^ -^- ^•
those precepts above all other things not to be forgotten.
From thence came Peter and Andrew, James and John, and Joh. i. 44.
all; they were all Galileans, and had seen Christ's first glory 21'^ &c'
there. Here they saw His last.
It was called Galilee of the Gentiles, for it was set in the Mat. 4. 15.
confines of them, though it was itself in Judea ^. And now
Christ Avas gone up, they were to go down and preach Christ
to them both ; to Jews, and Gentiles, and all.
Where it is not amiss to take notice of the word, that
Gahlee signifies ' a revolution.' And these Galileans had See Cru-
not their name for nothing, they made that word good ; ' ''""
they made such a revolution in the world as was never made
before. For at their preaching of Christ, they made dark-
ness light, and turned the Avorld round. About came the
' Sienim sacramenta quamdam simi- rum rerum nomina accipiunt. 0pp.,
litudinem earum rerum, quarum sacra- torn. ii. col. 202.
menta sunt, non haberent, omnino "^ See Spanliem. 0pp., torn. i. p. 39 ;
sacramenta non essent. Ex hac au- Wells's Geography, vol. ii. p. 174.
tern similitudineplerumqueetiam ipsa- edit. 1819.
COSIN. rp
274 Tlie revolution produced by Christianity.
s E R M. councillor, tlie scribe, the pliilosoplier, the orator, the cen-
'— — turion, the senator, and the emperor and all ; so that from
Joh. 1. 46. these Galileans, the persons and the place from whence
some others said no good thing could come, there was once
brought one of the best things that ever the world had.
And so would the world find it, both for peace and justice,
for a \drtuous life, and for an uncorrupt religion, every way,
if men would not revolve and turn themselves back again
from that point Avhercunto these Galileans first converted
them ; or if they would but yet redire ad principia, return
to Christ^s own rules, for that is to be a right Galilean.
Peradventure Julian and his followers will deride both the
Galileans and all besides that refer to them ; but their
comfort is, that Christ their master, and His Angels here,
will acknowledge them. They went for the heretics of
Seep. 141. Julian's time; vicisti, Galilcee, was his last word, and his
utmost scorn ; but it cost him dear, that ; he had as good
have let the Gahlean and His true followers alone. This for
vi?'i Galil(si.
2. Then secondly. Quid statis aspicienfes 7 The Angels
ask the Apostles here, why they stood looking still into
heaven ? Wliicli being nothing else but a fair reducing of
them from that sight, the end whereof they would otherwise
gladly have seen, I will the more readily pass it over; the
rather because I do not take it, as I see some men are some-
what too apt to do \ to be any great reprehension of them ;
for who can much blame them if they be loath to let their
eyes go from Him, if they desire to see an end of that sight,
the like whereof Avas never seen before nor since ?
Yet since the clouds would let them see Him no longer, it
was time to take them off from having recourse to this
corporal presence any more, and to bid them look now after
His Spirit, which is to send them away about the errand
that He had given them before.
This is sure, that Christ is gone and taken up into heaven,
both from their sight and om's, from whence He willnot
Acts 3. 21. return in any bodily manner again, till, as St. Peter says,
hereafter, the time of restitution comes ; till He comes at
last to take an account of the world, both how His Spirit has
' See Poli Synops.
Practical deduction from the text. 27 o
been used by tliera, and how they have entertained tliat
errand -which His Apostles here In-onght to them. And
then both they, and we, and all the Avorld, shall see Him ;
see Him coming down in the clouds again, as here He went
up ; which if we had time to go tln'ough them, the Angels'
last words, and the last part of all, ' This same Jesus,
Whom you have seen taken up from you into heaven, shall
so come in like manner as you have seen Him go into
heaven/
But all this concerns another article of religion, which, to
set it forth right as it should be, Avill require another sermon.
This was designed and intended only for the ascension.
Let the end of all be, that as Christ is gone up to heaven
before us, so we may prepare to go up thither after Him ; for
His going up thither was not altogether for Himself; thither Heb.G. 20.
is He gone as our forerunner, saith the Apostle ; to lay open Mai. 3. i.
the way before us, saith the prophet; to prepare a place for Joh. ii. 2.
us, saith He Himself. It is but in heart and mind that we
can get thither yet ; sed qui posuit ascensiones in corde, he
that can set his heart upon His ascension here, shall not fail
to be with Him in person hereafter. To which blessed
estate, the end of our desires here and of our fruition there.
He vouchsafe to bring us all ; to Him, with the Father and
the Holy Ghost, one eternal Deity, be all honour and glory
now and for evermore. Amen.
T 2
SEHMON XX.
PARTS, IN FESTO NATIVITATIS CHRISTI, 1051, [nEW STYLE.]
CORAM REGE CAROLO.
St. John i. 9^ 10. Evangelium Diei.
Erat Ille lux ilia, et vera ilia lux, ^c.
He ivas that light, ov, That light ivas the true light, which
ligliteth every man that cometh into the world, and He ivas
in the world.
S E R M. The Gospel of St. Jolni contains all divinity ; tliis chapter,
liih:: all tlae Gospel ; and this text, all the chapter.
It is of a light that shined in darkness ; that darkness was
the world, and that light was Christ, \Yhose coming into the
world we are now come to remember, at all times to be re-
membered, but at this time above others, when this feast
is held, the feast of Christ's nativity, which St. Chrjsostom
calls omnium festorum metropoVin^ , the metropohtan feast of
the Christians, whereon they met together in a solemnity"^
every year to celebrate the contents of this Gospel of St. John,
which was read to-day in the Clmrch'^.
Ezek. 1. Of the vision in one of the prophets, that was presented to
^^- him in four several shapes, it hath been usually received
amongst Christians^ to apply the eagle to St. John.
And the nature of the eagle hath two special properties,
" Kal -yap lopTTj /UfAAft TrpnaeXavveiv '' See Bingham, xx. 4. § 5.
7) Tracrwv kop-rSiv ire^ucoTaTT) koX (ppiKoi- "^ As the Gospel for Christinas day.
SfrrraTTj, ^v ovk &v tis afidpToi, ixr}Tp6- '^ See S. Jerome adv. Jovian., lib. i.
■noKiv -Kaawu rSiv kopTwv ■Kpoffenrwv. torn. iii. 0pp., p. 16, and tlic authorities
S. Chrysost. Honi. .'51. de Philogonis, cited by Pritius in his Introductio in
toni. i. p. 3j.;. cd. Francof. cited by lect. N. T., p. 218. ed. 1737.
Bingliam, xx. 4. § 5.
Division of the subject wider discussion. 277
both described and set forth to us in the book of Jolj.
Whereof the first is ipsum lucis fontein aspicere, to tower the Job 39. 27.
highest of any fowl under heaven, and to look upon the light
of the sun itself. The other is advolure ad corpora, to fly job 9. 2(J.
down suddenly upon the earthy and to be where the body is.
Which two, if they be applied to Christ, are Uvely expressed
by St. John ; and nowhere more lively than in the Gospel of
this day.
For as an eagle in the clouds ; first, he mounteth high and
casts his eyes upon the brightness of that light by which all
the lights and all the things of heaven and earth were first
made, the hght that was with God from all eternity, that is,
was God Himself. Higher he could not go.
And after this, down he flies from this height above to the
body that he saw here below, from Verbum Deus to Verbum
caro, which is the mystery of Christ's incarnation ; and both
these, the mystery of this day and the hght of this text.
Wherein, because it is too long to go through it all at one
time, therefore at this time we shall insist only upon such
branches as will arise out of these two considerations ; a per-
sonal light and a real light. (1.) First, who this light is, and
then (2.) what it is ; where Ave must look both upon the light
of faith and grace, which is here also intended, and upon the
light of nature and reason, which is a lesser beam that flows
from it ; besides some other lights that we may reflect on in
the world, which will admit of an application to the true light
of this text. And this light was as this day presented to the
worldj this day of Christ's blessed nativity.
Whereof that we may speak to the honour of God, and
the preserving of Christ's true light and religion among
US, we beseech Him for the assistance of His blessed
Spu'it.
Remembering our duty, and putting you all in mind to
pray, both now and always, for the good estate of, &c.
Therein for the king's most excellent majesty, in whose
presence now we are, our sovereign master.
Rendering likewise praise for all God's mercies and
favours to His Church; chiefly, as we now come to
acknowledge it, for the blessed incarnation of our Saviour,
and for the hght of grace and truth that this day shined
278 St. John's Gospel rejected by the heretics.
S E R M. Tipon the darkness of error and ignorance ; as also for all
XX.
tliein that have been children of this light and have cast
away the works of darkness from them, and put on
the armour of light, the choice vessels of His grace, and
the shining lights of the world, in their several generations
before us. INIost humbly beseeching Him, &c. Concluding,
as we shall do now, Avith
Pater Noster, ^c.
Erat Ille lux ilia. That light was the true light.
It was an injury common to all the four Evangelists, that
all their Gospels were severally refused by one sect of heretics
or other, and this we have from Irenpeus^, who lived in their
time, and wrote against them, not long after the time of the
Apostles.
But it was a peculiar injury, and proper to St. John alone,
to be refused by a sect that admitted all the other three
Evangelists, and rejected his Gospel only ; and this we have
from Epiphanius^, who wrote of them in his time, and called
them, as the Christians then did, ol <pi\oaKiol, or Jucifuyi, that
is, men that loved their own darkness, and hated this light
so much, which St. John here sets forth, as that they could
neither abide to see it nor to hear of it. They would none
of his Gospel, because there was a light in it that discovered
their darkness, the darkness of their deeds, and the darkness
of their wits besides.
For they were a limb and a branch of the black rowled
Arian ; who being unable to look upon the glorious splendour
of this light attributed by St. John to Christ, and not com-
prehending the great mystery of this day, that He Who was
Verbum caro, and came into the world, was Verbum Deus too,
before all worlds ; they took a round and a short way to con-
demn all that they did not by the light of their own Avits and
reason understand, and therefore they refused the whole
Gospels.
e S. Ircnceus, lib. iii. cap. ii. p. 192. who admitted tlie other Gospels, refused
e-Iit. Massuet. to accept that of St. John. See also
f S. Epipli. adv. Ilaeres. li. § 3. I'hilas^tr. de Ilaeres., cap. ()().
(adv. IliBrcs. Alogorum,) torn. i. p. k See Pntius, lutrod. ad Icotionem
•in. edit. Par. 1022. Trcnanis, lib. iii. N. T., p. 200.
cap. ii. p. l!)2, informs us that heretics
Comprehensive nature of the text. 279
Indeed his whole Gospel is comprelieiidcd iu this very
beginning of it ; and in a few verses here at first, whereof
this text is one, he hath contracted all that which is exten-
sively spread and dilated through the whole book.
For here is, first, the foundation of all in the divinity of
Christ, that light ; and secondly, here is the execution of all
in the incarnation of Christ, another hght ; and thirdly, here
is the eftect of all in tlic application of Christ, which is a
light of grace and truth revealed to all the world; points of
belief all, and proper to this day, but no less behoveful for us
than points of practice be. For I believe the reason that
most men live no better is, because thev believe no better.
They think too meanly of Christ, they apprehend not truly
what He is, they are oftended in Him. For if they did indeed
believe either the majesty of His person, or the greatness of
His power, or the mystery of His incarnation, or the truth of
His word, they would not, they durst not, take that Hberty
that they do to follow their own ways so much, and to regard
His so little, as most an end they are ; for this is both their
rule and ours ; theirs, the less faith men have of Christ the
less reverence they will be bound to have for Him ; and ours,
the siu'er behef, the better life.
Begin then with His divinity, which is His first, Erat Ule
lux ilia, His eternal hght, in Verbwn erat injjrincijno ; for that Job. i. i.
Verbum, that Verb, that Word, was Christ, and whoever likes
not that worct there used for Him thinks himself wiser than
St. John and Him both, and must of necessity get him either
a new grammar or a new Scripture. But St. John must not
be taught how to speak. Christ was that Word and that Word
was this Light, and this Light was from the beginning here,
and that beginning was before the beginning of Genesis ; for
that was but the beginning of the world, and this was before
all worlds, this Light before all other lights whatsoever ; for all
other lights were made by It, and fiat lux was the first word
that this Word spake when He made all the world besides.
And though the first book of the Bible, that Genesis, and
the last book of it, this Gospel, (for this was the last book'^
that was Avritten of all the Bible,) though they begin both
^ See Epiphau. Ha? res. li. § 12. and p. IJl.
Lampe Comment, in S. Joan., toni. i.
280 The eternal Godhead of the Son.
s E R M. with tlie same words^ ' In tlic beginning/ botli this and that,
— '-^ — yet if jNIoses's beginning begins only witli the creation, which
Avas not yet six thovisand years since, and St. Jolni's begin-
ning begins Avith Christ's eternity, wliich no milHons of
years can calculate, then was that first beginning of Genesis
far and long after the last beginning of this Gospel, and
St. John mounted higher than ever Moses did, to look upon
a brighter light than he. And this was lux Verbi, that this
light was the Word and the Son of God, Who was with God
Rom. 9. 5. from all eternity, and that this Son of God was God Himself,
2 Cor 11 . .
3l_ ■ ■ blessed for ever. A point of faith founded upon this place
of Scripture, which did so A^ex and anguish the Arian of old,
as it does the newer Arian, the Socinian, at this day, that
receiving this Scripture, which they dare not yet deny, and
being disfurnished of all other escapes, they are fain to turn
light into darkness and to corrupt the place Avith a false
interpunction' betAveen Verhum erat and Deus ; and thereby
make no sense of the words Avhich they are not willing to
understand.
But the brightness of this light dazzled them, and His
incarnation, which is here the second light, put out their
eyes. For through that cloud, the cloud of His flesh, as they
called it, they could see no light at all, more than, as they
said, every man has besides, as well as He; and so they
made the mA'sterv of godliness to be the detriment of the
Godhead.
Notwithstanding there is such a perspicuity in this cloud
of His incarnation, that by the very light of reason, if Ave
had nothing but that to help us, Ave might see somewhat
else through it; and by the light of grace, and faith in
God's Avord, Avhich may make use of our reason too, much
more.
It is a clear and a bright cloud this, like that wherein He
Mat. 17.5. Avas Avrapped and encompassed AAdien He was transfigured in
His glory. We may see all these lights through it.
(1.) First, because caro Avould have been verhum, AA'hen he
that was but flesh and blood Avould needs have been wiser than
the Word of God Itself, and knoAv Avhat Avas good or ill
' See Scherzer Colleg. Aiiti-Soein.. vations ii])on this passage contained in
p. 390. ed. Lips. 1()72, and tlie obsoi- tlie Cunu Philologicse of AVolfius.
Ill what respects Christ is ' the Lijht.' 281
for him better tlmn He, wliicli was our utter undoing ;
therefore that Verbuin shoukl become caro was the only way
to restore us^ and set all right again with Him That had been
so justly oftended against us. For otherwise no7i potuit im-
plerijustitiu, God's justice might never have been satisfied ;
His mercy peradventure mighty but His justice never; and
His justice was as tender and dear an attribute to Him as
His mercy is. So that this light is here clear enough in
Christ's coming to the Avorld to save us from perpetual ruin
and darkness. Si caro verbum, if our taking upon us the
person and power of God were our only bane, then Verbum
caro, His taking upon Him the nature and condition of man,
wherein to reconcile and satisfy that person, Avas to be our
only remedy ; for none can satisfy the infinite offended
justice of God, but one that was infinite in worth and justice
Himself, which none of us ever were, or ever Avill be, take us
altogether, all the world over, and in all ages of the world
besides. Sed erat Ille lux ilia, He only was the light that
could come shining out upon this darkness and give it this
lustre.
(2.) Then, secondly, Verbum lucerna, which is another Ps. 1 1 a.
light that He brought with Him, to manifest Himself to be '^'
the only person of "Whom so many excellent things were
spoken, all along this book ; and that it was He in Whom
all the words of all the former promises and prophecies in
this book were fidfilled. So was He the light objective.
Again, for that He came to disclose to us all the whole
counsel of God, as the light discovereth any hidden thing
whatsoever, and the Apostle tells us of the hidden things of
God, and of the mystery that had been kept secret in all Eph, 3. 3,
ages before ; this mystery did this light discover, and left
out none of it to be discovered in after ages neither in scri-
nio jjcctoris of no mortal man whosoever ; for by Him, by
Christ only, we know whatsoever we are to know, or shall
ever know, of God's mind to us in any age. So was He the
light effective.
And lastly, for that He came to us not only as a Saviour
to redeem us, but as a light to direct us, and to shew us
where our way lies, that we might come to Ilim and be
made capable of His redemption. That way lies in His Avord,
5.
283 TJie Ufjht mentioned in the text is
s E R M. and it is nowhere else to be found. Lucerna pedibus meis
XK. Y^rbum Tiann. And so was He the Ha-ht prceceptive.
Ps 1 19 . .
loj. ' Now among all these lights, I miss the light of nature,
and some other lights besides, which be either dim and weak
lights, till this ilia lux, this clear and divine light, comes to
help them ; or else they be deceitful and false lights, till this
vera lux, this supernatural and true light, comes to discover
them.
There is in the verse before somewhat said to tliis purpose
ver. 8. of the dim and weaker lights ; non erat ille ilia lux, ' He was
not that light.^ It was said of a saint, and the greatest
saint that was then upon the earth ; for there was not a
Mat. 11. greater than John the Baptist.
^'' It is true that Christ Himself called him a light, and a
.Toll. 5. 35. light with large additions, a bm*ning and a shining light ;
but yet with this restriction made by himself, that his light
.Toll. 3. io. should diminish and waste as it burnt, so should not
Christ's ; they are the saint's own words. Nor did ever any
man else say of him as they that think they cannot say too
much of some other saints, when they pray to them and call
them fontes lucis, the very fountain and source of light ;
which by our book here can be given to none but God.
It is true likewise that all the Apostles are said to be
Mat. 0. 1 4. lights, Vos estis lux mundi, but yet with the like limitation,
that they were but set up to convey the light of this text to
the world.
Eph. '). 8. It is as true that all faithful Christians are said to be light,
iJoli. 1.7. and to walk in the light; but all this is but to signify that
they had been in darkness before. Light they were, but
light by reflection and illustration of this essential and super-
natural light ; which Christ only is. For He was the foun-
tain of all their light, fans lucis lie, and light so as nobody
else was so, with His distinctive article and His peculiar
addition, both ilia and vera.
For non sic dicitur lux sicut lapis, as St. Austin said when
he was once preaching upon this text : Christ is not so
iCor.in.i. called Light here, as elsewhere He is called a Rock, or a
.h.b. 10. Y)ooY, or a Vine; as His flesh is called Meat, and His blood
Joh. 1.5. 1. said to be Drink ; for the one He is truly and properly called,
>.oo. ^^^^^ t|jgg(3 other arc l)ut a metaphor. Non enim. liunc carnem
superior to the I'lyfit of nature and reason. 283
qiiem videtis, manducaturi estis, sed spiritualiter intell'/r/ite ;
*■ 3'^e shall not cat this flesh which ye see, but after a spiritual
manner, in that sense real/ And so are you to understand
it, which in St. Austin's days was the true Catholic doctrine
of the Church, and so it is still ; for the other new doctrine
of a gross and corporal manner is not Catholic ^.
But light, wheresoever, to my remembrance, it is found in
any place of Scripture, and transferred from the natural to
a figurative sense, it takes a higher signification than that.
Either it signifies the essential Light, which is Christ ; or it
signifies the supernatural light of faith and grace, which is
the working of Christ upon them and their lives that believe
in Hinij and it is the principal scope of the Evangelist in
this place. Other lights there be, whereof we may make our
use, but they are still to be taken in and applied chiefly to
this; without which the more lights there are, the more
shadows also will be cast by them all.
Look we now upon our own light, the light of nature and
reason. In all philosophy there is not so dark a thing as
light. As the sun, which is fo?is lucis naturalis, the fountain
of this natural light, is the most e^^dent thing to be seen
and yet the hardest to be looked upon, so is this natural
light we now see, to our reason aiid understanding.
Nothing clearer to sense, for we see through it, and see all
things by it ; and yet nothing so dark to us when we come
to reason and discourse about it , it is enwrapped in so many
scruples. Nothing nearer to our sight, for it is round about
us; and yet nothing more remote from our knowledge, for
we know neither entrance nor hmits of it. Nothing more
easy to be discerned, for every child can do it ; and yet
nothing more hard to be comprehended, for no man under-
stands it. It is the most apprehensible by sense, and the
least comprehensible by reason; if we wink, we cannot
choose but see it ; if we stare, we know it never the better.
For no man is yet got so near to the knowledge of the
qualities of light, as to know whether light itself be a quality
or a substance.
If then this natural light be so dark to our natm'al reason,
'' See Cosin's Historia Transubstan- edit. 167o, where he establishes this
liationis Facialis, cap. v. § 20. p. 7->. assertion.
284 Christian faith consistent with reason.
S E R M. Low shall Avc liope to comprelieud tlie supernatural light of
— — this text, if Ave set our natural reason only to search into it,
and pierce farther to know it than the Scripture hath made
it known and revealed it to us ?
Among the ancients ' they had a precious composition for
their lamps, which kept light in their sepulchres as long as
they were kept in there, for many hundred years together ;
and yet as soon as these lights of theirs within the close
vaults Avere at any time discovered and brought forth into
this light of ours Avithin the open au', they presently vanished
and came to nothing. It proves to he alike Avith this light
of the text, the eternal light of Christ's Deity and His person,
and the supernatural light of His faith and religion. If we
keep them in their right sphere and hold them in their
proper place, as they are contained and revealed to us in the
Scriptures, they Avill enlighten and warm and purify us, as
those fires and lights of old did their seprdchres ; but Avhen
Ave bring this light out to the common light of natural
reason, to our inferences and deductions, to our scruples and
exceptions that Ave usually make there, it may be in danger
both to vanish itself, and perchance to extinguish our reason
besides. For men may search so far and reason so long of
these matters, as that they may not only lose them, but even
lose themselves and all, and so believe nothing.
Not, yet, that Ave are boimd to believe any thing against
our reason, that is, to believe Ave know not Avhy. It is but
a slack opinion, it is but a rash assent, it is not belief, that
is not grounded upon right reason.
He that should come to an infidel, a carnal, a mere
natural man, whom we presume to be endowed AA'itli the
light of reason, and should at first, Avithout any other pre-
paration, present that man Avith this kind of necessity in
believing, — ' Thou shalt burn in fire and brimstone eternally,
except thou believe a Trinity of Persons, without any more
ado ; and except thou believe the incarnation of the Son of
God to be of the second Person in that Trinity, and except
thou believe that a Virgin, a blessed Virgin, had a Son, and
the same Son that God had, God and man in one Person,
' See Octavii Funarii dissertatio de Gnevii Thcsaur. Aiitiq. lloiiian., toni.
veteruin luccrnis sepulchralibus, in xii. p. 997.
Progressive aryument for Christianitij . 285
and tluit this one Person, being an immortal God, was aftcr-
Avards pnt to death npon a cross;' this were somewliat an un-
reasonable proceeding with that natural and reasonable man;
though it would not be so Avith us, who are ah'eady baptized,
instructed, and believe the Scriptures to be the revealed
word of God.
But for him that neither beUeves, nor ever heard of them
before, so far would it be from Avorking any spiritual cure
upon him, that by such a course as this, the mysteries of
Christ would be sooner brought into a contempt than into a
belief with him. For that man, if any other should proceed
so with him, ' Believe all we sav or vou burn in hell/ would
find an easy way to answer and escape all ; that is, first, not
to believe hell itself, and then to say that nothing could bind
him to believe all the rest.
Therefore with a natm'al man, if he had but reason, I
would begin higher. For we yield it that reason must be
satisfied, and for all our divinity we maintain it that reason
may be satisfied by taking this way with it which I touched
upon the last time.
First, that this world, the greater and the lesser world, frames
of so much harmony and so much subordination in the parts
of them both, must necessarily have had a workman to make
them both ; for nothing can make itself, as reason itself will
conceive.
Then, that no such workman would deliver over a frame
and Avork of so much majesty to be left to fortune, or carried
casually at adventui'e, without any care or providence to
govern it ; but that He would still retain the sovereign ad-
ministration of it in His own hands; for this is reason too.
Next, that if He does so, if He made us and not we our-
selves, if He sustains us and not Ave ourselves, that then cer-
tainly there ought some serAdce and worship to be done Him
for doing so ; and not that men should all serve themselves
and do what they list, but that they should folloAv His Avill
and pleasure in all things. Who was their Creator, and is their
King ; for this is but reason still.
Then, that if there be such a serAdee to be done Him accord-
ing to His will, that Avill of His must be manifest and made
knoAvn, what it is, and what manner of serAiice and religion
286 Conclusion of the arfjument.
S E R M. will be acccpt.ablc to Hinij or otlienvise we had as good let
^^' Him have none at all ; for this hkcwise oiu' reason will sug-
gest to us.
And lastly, that this manifestation of His will must be
permanent, as all wills and all laws are, is but reasonable;
and to make them so permanent and durable that they must
be written and put upon record, is but reason neither;
which record either this Scripture is, or none is, and then are
all the former reasons gone. For let all the world shew such
another, of so much evidence and majesty, so much consent
and harmony, so many prophecies foretold, so many fulfilled
in it ; the promise and prophecy of this day above them all,
the miracles to assei't it, the long continuance to confirm it,
and many other such CAidences as we can produce for it
besides ; — all which if they make not up such an arithmetical,
such a forcible argument as will tie up oiu- reason in a pin-
fold, and make it assent whether it will or no, as all demon-
strative arguments do, (for which the will shall never be re-
Avarded,) yet such a logical, such a rational and persuasive
argument they will make up, as that no reasonable man shall
be able, with true reason, to withstand it. And then will the
conclusion of all be, that therefore from this light of Scrip-
ture, which is the word and will of God, all the rules of our
life and all the articles of oiu' belief must of reason be drawn ;
and that light of reason will bring the natural man to the
light of this text, that is, both to believe it, and to know
upon what grounds and why he does believe it, and all that
has been said of it.
For let no man think that God hath given him so much
ease here as to enlighten him, or to save him, by believing
he knows not what or why. Indeed knowledge "\nll not save
us, but yet without knowledge we are never like to be saved.
It is the light of faith that shews the right way to be saved ;
but in that way faith is not on this side knowledge, but
beyond it, and we must necessarily come to the light of
knowledge and reason first ; though when we are come
thither we must not stay in it, but make use of it to lead us
to a better and a higher light than it.
For a regenerate man (and it is the mystery and the
Collect of this day that puts us in mind of a regenerate
T^nie use of reason in matters of faith. 287
man"",) a regenerate man advauccth his reason; and being
now made a new creature, hatli also a new facidty and a new
light of reason given him, whereby he beheveth the mysteries of
rehgion out of another reason than as a mere natural man he
believed natural and moral things before. For he believes
them now for their own light, the light of faith -, though he
took knowledge of them before by another light, the light of
common reason, and by those human arguments which work
upon other men, if they Avilfully put not out their own light.
As for instance, divers and sundiymen walk by the sea side;
and the same beams of the sun giving light to them all, one
by the benefit of that light gathers up little light pebbles,
and shells that are finely speckled, for their pleasure, for their
vanity : and another by the same light seeks after the pre-
cious pearl and the amber, for a more noble use. So in the
common light of reason, which is a beam that flows fi'om
this light of the text too, all men walk amongst us ; but one
employs this light ^^pon the searching after impertinent
vanities; another, by a better use of the same light, finds
out the mysteries of religion, and falls in love with them
both for theii' own worth's sake, and for the helps that they
give him towards the leading of a righteous, a noble, and a
true Christian life.
So some men by the benefit of the light of nature have
found out things profitable and useful for all men. Others
have made use of that light to search and find out all the
secret corners of pleasure and gain to themselves. They have
found wherein the force and weakness of another cousisteth,
and made their advantage of him by circumventing him in
them both. They have found his natural (I had better call
it his unnatural,) humour, to neglect, and to contemn, or to
forsake religion ; and they have fed and fomented that dis-
order in him for their own ends. They have found all his
inclinations to liberty and pleasure, to wantonness and vanity;
and they have kept open that leak to his ruin.
All the ways both of worldly wisdom and of natm'al craft
lay open to this light, but when they have gone all these
ways and searched into all these corners, they have got no
" 'Almighty God .... grant that dren by adoption and grace . . . .'
we being regenerate, and made Thy chil- Collect for Christmas day.
288 Application of the argument.
S E R M. further all tliis while than to a walk by a tempestuous sea
XX.
side, and there gathered up a few cockle-shells of vanity, or
other pcdling pebbles, that are of no greater use than to play
withal, or to do mischief with them when they have them.
Or take another similitude. The light and knowledge of
these men seem to be great, out of the same reason that a
torch in a misty night seems to be greater than in a clear,
because it hath kindled and inflamed much thick and gross
air round about it. For the light and knowledge of mere
natural and carnal men seems great, not because it is so
indeed, but because it kindles an admiration in some other
airy persons about them, that are not so crafty, nor so busy,
nor so knowing, peradventure, as themselves be.
But to make now our best use of this light, the light of
nature and reason. If we can take this light of reason that is
in us, this poor snuff of light that is almost out in us, that is,
our faint and dim knowledge of the things of God, which
risetli out of this light of nature ; if we can but find out one
small coal in those embers, though it be but a little spark of
fire left among those cold ashes of oui" nature, yet if Ave will
take the pains to kneel down and blow that coal Avith our
devout and humble prayers, we shall by this means light our-
selves a little candle, and by that light fall to reading that
book which we call the history of the Bible, the A^ill and the
word of God. Then if with that candle we can go about and
search for Christ, Avliere He is to be found, in all the
mysteries of His religion, in His humiliation to-day, begin
there, (for this day brings that virtue of humility into credit,
p. 270. we shall not find that virtue in all Aristotle's Ethics, nor in
all the books of all the natural philosophers in the world, they
had no light to find it by, but begin there ;) and if we can
find a Saviour there, w^e will bless God for this beginning, it
is the best sight that ever we saw in our lives, and concerns
us most.
Mat. 2.11. Then if w^e can find Him flying into Egypt, and find our-
selves in a disposition to follow Him and to keep Him com-
pany in a persecution, in a banishment ; from thence to His
life and doctrine, to hear Him Avhat He says there; from
thence to His cross and passion, to gather up some drops of
His blood there; from thence to His resurrection, to find
Reason to be subordinate to faith. 289
the virtue and effect of it in ours here ; and fi'om thence to
His ascension, that avc may k^arn the way after Hira thither ;
all this will bring us to the light of this text and to the love
of the Scriptures, and that love to a belief of the truth of
them all, and that historical belief to a belief of application,
that as all these things were certainly done, so they were as
certainly all done for us.
And thus one light directs us to another. And as by the
quantity in the light of the moon, we know the position and
distance of the sun, how far or how near the sun is to her ;
so by the working of the light of nature and reason in us, we
may discern how near to the other greater light, the light of
faith in Christ, we stand.
If we find our natural facidties rectified, so as that that
understanding and reason, which we have in moral and civil
actions, be bent likev.dse upon the practice and exaltation of
Christian and religious actions, we may be sure this other
greater light is about us. But if we be cold in them, in
actuating, in exalting, in using our natural faculties and light
to the end, we shall be in danger to be deprived of all liglit,
we shall not see the invisible God in visible things, (which
St. Paul makes so inexcusable, so unpardonable a sin,) we Rom. i
shall not see the light of God that shined upon us this day, ' ' " "
nor the mind of God that was declared to us in this Gospel ;
we shall not see the hand of God in all our worldly crosses,
nor the seal of God in any spiritual blessing or promise what-
soever. But the light of faith bears me witness that I see
all this.
To conclude : the light of nature, in the highest exaltation
of it, is not the light of faith ; but yet if there be that use
made of it that there should be, it will make somewhat
towards it. Faith and nature are subordinate, and the one
rules the other. The light of faith bears me witness that I
have Christ with all the benefit of His incarnation ; and the
light of natural reason exalted to religious uses, bears me
witness that I have faith Avhereby I apprehend Him. Only
that man whose conscience testifies to himself, and whose
actions testify to the world, that he does what he can to
follow the true light of this text, and all the rules of religion,
and them only, which that Light set forth and revealed in His
COSIN. u
290 Exaltation of the light of faith.
S E R M. own word, tliat man only cau believe himself, or be believed
— — by others, that he hath the true light of faith and religion in
him.
And when he is come once into this light, he shall never
envy the lustre and glory of any other blazing lights of the
Avorld, tliat anywhere set up themselves to put out this; but
when their light shall turn to darkness, his shall grow up
from a fair ho})e to a full assurance that it shall never go out,
and that neither the works of darkness, nor the prince and
power of darkness, shall ever prevail against it ; but as the
light of reason is exalted to the light of faith here, so the
light of faith shall be exalted unto the light of glory here-
after. AVhereof this blessed Sacrament will be a true and a
lively pledge, if it be received with a true and a lively faith,
as I trust it has been by many of us already, and shall be
now again in the sight of God and the presence of us all by
him, upon whom, next under God, we all still depend for the
presernng of this true light, and the upholding of Christ's
true religion among us.
I should now go on to present you with those many and
sundry lights of the world that I proposed at first, either
applica- appliablc' or opposed to the light of this text. But I have
set forth that which belongs most properly to this day ; and
having already filled up the portion of the day which is
afforded for this sermon, I shall reserve the rest for another.
To God Almighty, the Father, the Son and the Holy
Ghost, be all honour and glory, now and for evermore.
Amen.
bi
SEIIMON XXI.
I'ARis, JAN. 5, 1053, [new style.]
DOMINICA SECUNDA POST NATIVITATEM DOMINI.
St. Matthew ii. [1. and] 2.
Venenmt magi .... dicentes, .... Vidimus enim stellam
Ejus in orient e.
There came wise men .... and said, .... For ive have seen
His star in the east.
This text will be part of the Gospel wHch is appointed to
be read in tlie Church to-morrow % and to-morrow will be the
last day of the twelve which are appointed to wait upon the
feast of Christ's blessed Nativity. The last day of the feast,
and, as St. John said of another, the last and the greatest Joh. 7. 37.
day of the feast to us ; for by this last day we come to have
an interest in the first, and by the light of this star to find
out oiu' right way to Christ.
I shall therefore take the opportunity of our meeting here
together to-day, (which of all the twelve is the nearest to the
last,) to look upon those persons that looked upon this star,
and to take our text out of that Gospel which belongs to the
day of Christ's Epiphany, the rather because this present
Sunday (as by the course of oiu- calendar it now falls out),
hath no other proper Gospel of its own assigned to it^'.
» Namely, upon the Epiphany. Sunday between Christmas day and
'' Provision is made for only one the Simday after the Epiphany.
u2
293 Division of the subject.
s E R M. From this appearing of the star we call it the Epiphany ;
-^^■^^•_ and when we call it so we speak Greek, for Epiphany is
neither English nor Latin, but a word borrowed from the
Eastern Fathers, which in their language signifies a manifest-
ation, or the shining out of somewhat from above. From
wdience God let this star appear in heaven, thereby to mani-
fest Christ to the Gentiles here on earth, and so to us.
And because there were more Epiphanies of Him than one,
the Epiphany of the Dove and the Voice from above, in the
Mat. 3. 1 7. next chapter hereafter, as well as the Epiphany of the light,
and the star from above, in this; therefore will you have
Lu. 3. 1— to-morrow the lesson at His baptism for the one, as you have
''■ the Gospel at the sight of this His star, for the other.
See p. 2. And though many other Epiphanies, or manifestations, of
Him there were besides these which are remembered in the
Church service all the Sundays following, yet this here hath
carried that name from them all, both because it was the first
of them all, and because it was one that did manifest as
much of Him as all the rest did, that is, the divinity and the
greatness of Christ there above, as well as the humanity and
the humility of Christ here below.
Is. 7. 11. The prophet Isaiah promised us that we should have two
signs, one from the depth here beneath, and another from
Is. 7. 12. the height above; and though Ahaz, and such as he is, re-
garded neither, yet God gave them both ; and those that are
wise, wise as these men were, will look either way, and regard
them both (both the shepherds' sign and the wise men^s sign),
of Avhich two as we have hitherto looked upon the one, so are
we now come to take a view of the other, and to lift up our
'a manger: eyes from the humility of the cratch' to the sublimity of the
^g^ "" star. Vidimus enim stellam Ejus in oriente, ' for we have seen
His star in the east,' where for the better method of the
sermon, we shall observe these parts of the text.
(I.) The persons that saw this sight, who they were, and
what manner of persons they sustain.
(II.) Then the sight itself, or the star that they saw, what
manner of star it Avas.
(HI.) And thirdly, the place in which this star first appeared
to them, whereof they say, vidimus in oriente, that they saw
it in the east.
Uncertamty respecting the magi. 293
In which three, if we medtlle not in the pulpit with these
tilings which we meet withal in the schools, Malta qua^ sunt
eruditce qiuestionis, yet there are many things in them to he
enquired after by us^ which peradventure we knew not
before.
The sum and application of all will be, that as these wise
men did, so we also may look out to see if we can set our eyes
upon this star, and then to guide our course by it how we
are to go to seek, and to find, and to worship Christ, as they
also did before us.
Of which that we may speak, &c.
Pate?' Noster, b^c.
' For wc have seen His star in the east/
The matter of this text is the manifestation of our Saviour;
and the manner of it is by a sign from heaven. A sign that
was presented to certain persons of the East, with whom, as
they stand here first, so are we now first to begin, and to
enquire what manner of men, or what conditioned persons
thev were, that Christ should here first choose them out of all
other men abroad in the world besides, to reveal and mani-
fest Himself unto them.
The legends and uncertain stories of them, wherewith the
vanities of former times were Avont to entertain the people in
their sermons at this season, have abused the patience and
credulity of the world too much already when they could
precisely reckon up their number, and tell every one of
their names, and call that man an heretic that would not
believe them to be the 'three kings of Colon.'
And because there are many now about us that are ready
to sav as much still, and to belicAe that tradition themselves
no less than we believe this Gospel, if it might not be thought
so much time and so many words lost, I would tell you hoAV
that legend hath been made up among them.
(1.) And first, for their number; there is an imperfect
author, whom they have printed under St. Chrysostom's"=
''- Itaque elegerunt seipsos duodecim inter Opp.S.Chrysost, torn. vi. Append,
quidam ex ipsis studiosiores et ama- p. xxviii. edit. Par. 172 t. See also Sal-
tores mysterioriim ccelestium, et posue- nieron, Hist. Evang:., torn. iii. p. 342.
runt seipsos ad exspectationem stellae edit. Colonise, 1()12,
illius &c. Opus Imperf. in S. Matth.
291 Uncertainty respectinff their number,
SE RM. name, (but it is none of his', nor notliing like liim,) wlio
^^^•_ delivers it for a tradition in his time, though no man can yet
ctve ^r *^^^ whenever that time was, that they were twelve in number,
312. 31 G. and neither more nor less, to wait upon Christ's person, than
there are now days to wait upon His nativity. But to this
tradition they hold not.
There was a pope'' not long after that, as they say, knew
more of it than St. Chrysostom ever did, and he reduced
them to the number of three, having no other reason so to do
but only because they brought no more than three ofl'erings
to Christ with them ; whereof he thought fit to assign every
man one. And to this tradition they hold them now*^,
saying, many of them, that it is a general tradition of the
Universal Church; though in the meanwhile there was never
yet any Church (and there are Chm'ches of far greater extent
than theirs is) that either held it, or so much as ever heard
of it, but their own.
And yet if they would not obtrude this, or other such of
their own traditions (as they have done of late) upon all
other persons Avhatsoever, it were no great matter if (in such
an indifferent and inconsiderable matter as this is), we
suffered them to go alone by themselves and enjoy their own
private opinion ; but the reason that they give of it is not
worth the owning, as if eveiy one of these men came to offer
a several giff^, one to acknowledge Christ's royalty, another
His divinity, and the third His humanity s; for he was a
•' Seqiuintiir tres viri superni luminis tribiis personis, singulis singula munera
(luctum. S. Leonis de Epiph. Domini, offerentibus. Suareziu 3part. S.Thomse,
Serm. 1. § 2. Quod utique exiiide fieri torn. ii. p. 147.
novimus, ex quo tres inagos, de longin- s Per aurum rex ostenditur; in tliure
quitate suae regionis excitatos, ad cog- Deus dignoscitur ; per myrrham homo
noscendum et adorandum regem ca>li passus atque sepultus. B. Alcuini
perduxit. Serm. iii. § 4. Sec also Serm. Opera, torn. ii. p. 462. edit. 1777. Si
iv. § 2, Serm. v. § 1, &c. in Bibl. Pair., autem sollicito intellectu velimus as-
tom. V. p. 2. p. 812, &c. edit. 1618. picere, quomodo etiam triplex ilia
■^ Dicendum vcro est primo, tres tan- species munerum ab omnibus, qui ad
turn luimero fuisse. Haec est com- Christum gressu fidei veniunt, oflera-
munis sententia sanctorum. Suarez tur ; nonne in cordibus reete creden-
in 3 part. S.Thomse, torn. ii. p. 147. tium eadcm celebratur oblatio ? Aurum
edit. 1616. eniin de thesauro animi sui promit qui
' So Maldonat, Fuisse autem tres, Christum regem imivcrsitatis agnoscit.
etsi non ccrta, tamen probabili con- Myrrham oilVrt, (pii unigenitum Dei
jectura ex donorum numero colligi- credit veram sibi liominis miiissc natu-
tur. Crcdibilius est enini diversa quam ram. Et quodani eum tluirc vene-
eadem omnes numera dedisse. Sec rantur, qui in nullo ipsum patenifE
Ills note, ad loc. Significatum est Trini- niajestati imparem confitetiir. S.
talis mystcrium in tril)us muncribus et Leonis, Serm. vi, do l^i)iph. l)om. § 1.
their names, and their condition.
2U5
better Christian that said, Non singuli sitif/ula, sed sinr/idi tria
obtuIerunt^\ He that does not himself alone acknowledge all
these three together in Christ, (as yonr Majesty does -when you
come npon that day to offer,) comes not to Christ as these
men did, but keeps from Him one of his oblations^ one of
his due recognitions ; either his gold, or his frankincense, or
liis myrrh is wanting.
(2.) Secondly, for their names. There was one Peter
Comestor' that furnislied their legend with no less than nine
of them together, three in Hebrew, and three in Greek, and
three in Latin; and all of his own making, for he lived not fl. A.D.
in the world, and was not born till they had been above a^jl'gsa.^^^'
thousand years dead in their graves, and he had never an
author of whom to learn any of those names but himself
alone. Upon whose credit some other men took them after-
Avards up, and made use of them for their several purposes.
AVhereof in Philip Melanethon's and Luther's time (for so
they say themselves) their using of those names for certain
spells that they had in those days, was one"^.
Bibl. Patr., torn. v. p. 2. p. 817. edit.
1618. See also Tostatus in cap. ii.
Mat. quaest. 46. Opp. i. 21-5. edit.
Venet. JC15, et Ludolph. de Saxonia
de Vita Christi, sig. d. iiij, edit. Lugd.
1516.
^ Unusqiiisque autem eorum prse-
dicta tria obtulit, quia, ut dictum est,
niysterio congruit. NuUus eniin vere
Christianus dicitur qui non Christum
et Deum et regem et passum confitea-
tur, quod illis tribus muneribus signifi-
catur; unde llemigius, Isti magi non
singuli singula obtulerunt, sed singula
tria. Ludolph. de Saxonia de Vita
Christi, sig. d. iiij.
Quasritur an singuli singula, an
unusquisque tria obtulerit. Sed magis
fatendum est quod congruit mysterio,
scilicet, quod singuli tria. Unusquis-
que enim regem et Deiun et passibilem
Eum credebat. S. Anselmi Opp.,
torn. i. p. 16. edit. 1573.
Ingressi vero magi domum, quam
diversorium Lucas nominal, obtulerunt
puero singuli aurum, thus et myrram,
secundum Sabceis consuetam oblatio-
nem. Pet. Comest. Historia Evan-
gelica, cap. viii. edit. Argent. 1483.
' Nomina trium magorum lia;c sunt
Hebraice, Appellius, Anietus, Dama-
sius; Grece, Galgalath, jMagalath,
Sarachim. Pet. Comest. Hist. Evang.,
cap. viii. edit. 1483. Nato enim Do-
mino, tres magi Iherosolimam vene-
runt, quorum noniina in Hebreo sunt
Appellius, iSIellius, Damascus; Grcce,
Galgalath, Malgalath, Sarachim ; La-
tine, Jaspar, Balthasar, Melchior. Le-
genda Sanctorum, fol. 25. edit. Colon.
1483.
'' Et ut nihil deesset ad impiam
prophanationem, mos etiam iste vere
magicus inolevit, ut fictis bis Caspari,
Balthasaris et Melchioris nominibus,
cum crucis signo ter repetito purae
charts vel pergamine inscriptis et collo
appensis, quosvis morbos, scilicet, de-
pellant. Hospin. de origine festorum
Christian., p. 45. edit. Gen. 1674. But
Cosin need not have gone to Germany
for an illustration of this superstition.
There is (or was) in the vestry of
St. Peter's Mancroft, in his native city
of Norwich, a brass plate beaiing this
inscription : —
Jaspar fert myrrham, thus Melchior,
Balthasar aurum ;
Hsec tria qui secum portabit nomina
regum
Solvitur a morho, Christi pietate,
caduco.
See Bloomfield's History of Norfolk,
iv. 221, 8vo.
296 Uncertainty as to their relics.
^ XXI ^^' ^^'^ "^"^ *^^^ added a third story to their legend, where,
'— because St. Matthew said in his language that they were the
magi, the common people were made to believe, in their
language, that they were all magicians'; as good a reason,
that, as, because he said that they came from the east, there-
fore that they were all Ethiopians, or those whom we call the
black-moors of Africk, which is full south from Jerusalem.
(4.) But whatsoever their names or their country were here-
tofore, they have now, in a manner, lost them both, and
are generally (by them that would teach us all how to speak)
' Cologne called the three kings of 'Colen, a town here hard by" ; not
because they ever lived there, but only because they are said
to lie there ; or else they are much mistaken that say it, for
as they cannot agree, nor tell who brought them thither,
so I think it is as great a question whether they be there at
all, when at Saragosa in Spain, some men are as confident
that they have them there as others are at Colen that they
lie buried (not so, neither, but that they are all put up in
their silver shrines), among them. I doubt it is too true
that which father Latimer said once of them, in one of his
sermons upon this Epiphany before king Edward ; that there
is no truth in any of these stories at all ". And so I leave
them to their own uncertainties, that we maj^ enquire after
these" persons here at a far better oracle, and there learn
some instructions from them.
The best light we have to see and know who they at ere is
in the Scriptm'cs, Avhere if we look upon them as they are set
forth in this chapter of St. INIatthew, and in some other
places that were written and prophesied of them before, we
shall find that they sustain the nature and condition of four
several sorts of persons. AYliereof the first is, the persons of
the Gentiles and heathen men; for they were men of the
East, and at that door come we all in, east, and west, and
' See Tostat. in cap. ii. Mat. quasst. confitetur. P. Canisii Notse in Evan-
C, Opp. toni. ii. p. 183 ; Suarez in 3 gelicas Lectiones, p. 160. edit. Frib.
part. S. Thonia?, toni. ii. p. 147. Helv. 1595.
"' Quod ad sacra corum corpora per- " " But how these men came to Colen
tinet, li;ec a Persia ('onstantinopollm in Germany, I marvel greatly ; I tliink
translata, et inde Mediolanuni delata it is but the fantasies and illusions of
fuisse legimus, quae deinde Frederico the devil, which stirred up men to
imperatore, ejus nominis primo, Colo- worship stone and wood." Latimer's
niam pervenerunt, ubi adhuc ilia reli- Sermons, vol. ii. p. 353, edit. 1824; see
giose recondi tola Germania tot seculis also p. 363.
They were the first-fruits of the Gentiles. 297
all, as St. Paul told them at Aiitiocli, at tlic door of liope Acts 13.
which God had set open to the Geutiles, -whereof these men -^■
were the first that ever ° entered in at that door ; and when
they entered, they did it not in their own persons alone, but
in the names and persons of us all, all the Gentiles that
should come after them, to whom they led the way to Christ,
and left the door open for us ever since ; for Clirist That let
them in, if we will but take the pains to seek Him and to
come to Him as they did, we mav be sure will never shut us
out ; but as. by them He hath invited us, so He will be
ready to receive us, and make good all those promises which
both by His patriarchs and His prophets before, and by
Himself and His Apostles after. He hath published to all
the world. For so He did when He said first, that all the
nations of the earth should be the better for Him, by virtue Ps. 72.17.
of which saying, these first-fruits of the Gentiles had their g^^^.^^'
interest in Him. And so He did again when He bid all the
nations of the earth come to Him ; by vii-tue of which say- Ps. 86. 9.
ing likewise, both we ourselves and all other people besides, ^"" '
(all that do not either sit still and never look after Him, or
do not go the wrong way to Him, Avhen they seek Him,) all
such may have their interest also in Him as well as these
men here had.
(2.) Secondly, they sustain the persons of great and
honourable men. For so much we have of them in this
chapter, whereby we may fairly and clearly collect that they
were men of some higher note and regard than other
common men were. And the prophecies that went of them
before call them no less than kings and princes ; to-morroAv is. 49. 7 ;
you shall have two lessons that call them so, more than once, ^^^- '^' ^^'
(five or six times together,) besides that prophecy in the
Psalms which hath been usually applied to them in the Ps. 72. 10,
Church, that the kings of the isles should come and off'er '
Him presents, the kings of Arabia and Sheba should come
and fall down before Him with their gifts p.
° Et ifleo erant magi non malefici, p See Tertull. adv. Judaeos, § 9.
sed sapientes; priniitiae fidei nostrse. edit. Gersdorf. p. 4. p. 311 ; and Suarez
Ludolpli. de Saxonia, sig. d. ij. The in .3 part. S. Thomse, q. 36. disp. 14. §
expression is borrowed from St. An- 2, ' Quot et cujus conditionis viri magi
gustine, Opp. v. 637 ; see also Bibl. fuerint.'
Patr. V. 621 ; S. Chrysost. iii. 396.
42
298 If not kings, they were of hiyJi rank,
S E R M. Or if that place be not precisely to be understood of tliem^
— jjjjj^ rather of some otlier kings and princes that came in
long after them, (for if they were kings, they must be kings
of some parts of the east, from whence St. Matthew says here
they came, and not of any parts of the south, from whence it
was that the queen of Sheba came, whom therefore Christ
Jfat. 12. Himself calls the queen of the south,) and yet this hinders
not but that Isaiah prophesied of them, as well as David
prophesied of others ; and so they might be kings still.
I had rather it should be so than otherwise ; both for the
honour of kings, that Christ should first of all call them to
Him before all others; and for the honour of us all, that
kings should be our first leaders to Christ, and the ante-
signani, the standard-bearers of our true religion towards
Him. He that hath not a malignant eye to one of these
three, either to Christ Himself, or to the presents that are
brought Him, or to them that bring Him the presents, will
be willing enough to let them be here, as Isaiah called them
long before, to let them be kings.
But however it be, surely men of great rank and con-
dition they were, for they came not to Jerusalem here as
men that Avent about their own private aS'airs, and nobody
to regard or look after them when they came. But they
made their entrance into the city after a public and a
solemn manner ; they are ushered in by a star from heaven ;
they come, if not as kings themselves, yet as the ambassadors
and lieutenants of kings, at least. And they come from the
whole body of the Gentiles, in the behalf of them all, to
negotiate with the new-born King about their peace and
alliance with Him for ever; a matter of greater state and
more concernment than if all the kings and princes of the
earth had met together at Jerusalem about their own
alliance or peace, one Avitli another. Whereupon the whole
city takes notice of them, the king there, and the people, and
ver. 3, 4. all ; and so great an embassy, so powerful a coming it was,
that thev were all amazed and troubled at it, Herod and all
Jerusalem with him. Whether it was their great number
that attended them, or whether it was theii- great treasures
that they brought Avith them ; or whether it was, chiefly,
their business and their errand that they caused to be pro-
and men of learning. 299
claimed and published before tliem ; or all these together^i ; —
but somewhat it was that rendered them such persons, as that
the king called together his council about him for their
better reception and audience, and admitted them to his
own private conference with him besides, giving them their
despatch and their answer (which princes use not often to
do, but to persons as great or as considerable as themselves),
with his own mouth. So great persons they were.
Now from the greatness of their persons great men have
their lessons, that as they have their interest in Christ as
w^ell as others, so it is their duty to look after Him no less
than others do ; and wherever they can find Him, though it
be in His great humility, in His cratch or in His cross, the
cratch of His contempt, or the cross of His persecutions, or
in any condition whatsoever, yet there to come and acknow-
ledge Him, and wdth all their greatness, and all their train,
and all the treasures that they have, to fall down at His feet
and offer their service to Him ; the great men of the world
no less than the meanest shepherds of the field (of w4iom you
heard last that they had their Angel, as well as these men Lu. 2. n.
had their star), to bring them both to Christ. For as He is Gal. 2. 6.
no accepter, so is He no excepter neither, of any person
whatsoever, but looks for the same fear, and the same honour,
and the same religion from them all alike.
(3.) Thirdly, as they sustained the persons of great and
honom'able men, so did they the persons of wdse and learned
men besides, which was the title (as a title more to be regarded
than all their greatness), that St. Matthew here gave them.
Though in calling of them the magi of the East he does in
effect, and \drtually, call them the princes of the East; for
magi, though it be a word now indenizencd into the Greek
and Latin tongues, (wherein commonly the masters of those
tongues that use that word have no very good meaning in
it neither, Avhen they use it for such as Simon Magus, or
Elymas the sorcerer Avas, in the Acts of the Apostles,) yet
originally and properly the Avord belongs to neither of them
both, being in itself (as Herodotus^ that knew it best, has
1 Sec Tostat in cap. ii. Mattli. q. 24. ' Lib. i. § 140. edit. Wesseling. See
and 25, where lie enquires into the also Cicero de Divin. i. § 2-3.
reasons of this excitement.
300 Knowledge the handmaiden of faith.
S E R M. told us), a Persian Avord, a\ here there was never a kinsj that
XXI • • •
— 1— had not this name of Magus given to him, that is, a man
learned and wise in all manner of natural and supernatural
knowledge; whereof they accounted their knowledge in
astrolo2:v, or their studv of the stars, to be chief. And in
that sense was it given to these men here ; for from that
place they came. In other places and in after times it came
to be a word corrupted and to degenerate into a bad sense ;
but here it held in a good.
And a good use may be made of it ; that as Moses was
never the worse for being brought up and learned in all the
Acts 7. 22. wisdom and learning of Egypt, so shall neither any greatness
of place, nor any greatness of knowledge, nor any height of
Avisdom and learning whatsoever (if it be rightly ordered),
make any persons the more unfit for their coming to Christ,
or keep them at all the farther off from Him, Whose super-
natural and divine knowledge may well make the other
subsenient to it, but destroys it never.
(4.) Lastly then, they sustain the persons of faithful and
religious men, without which all the greatness and all the
wisdom or learning of the Avorld besides will do us no good.
The star that was in heaven set fire upon another star that
2Pet.i.i9. was in their hearts, which St. Peter calls the star of faith, that
shineth out there no less than this star did in the firma-
ment. A star that will bring every man to Christ, and
make him wise enough ; for it will make him wise to salva-
tion, which is a wisdom far above all that Avorldh" men have,
and far transcending all that these wise men had before they
had it.
Wise men they were before, and much knowledge they
had, but never so truly wise till now that their knowledge in
other matters brought them to the true knowledge of Christ,
and that their looking up to heaven, to the light and the
star there, taught them how to find their way on earth, and
2Pet.l.l9. to come, Avith St. Peter's star in their hearts, to Him Whom
Rev. 22. St. John calls Lucifer orientis, that is, the bright morning
^^' star of all the world, without Whose light and infiuence, both
they, and wc, and all the world, had been still in darkness.
But now it is oriens ex alto, and it was their wisdom to follow
it, so will it be ours ; and if we ])c wise, by one and the same
Tlie nature of the star. 301
Spii'it we shall think we kuow nothing till we come to know
our right way to Christ, and how much it concerns us never
to be seen out of it, if ever we mean to come where lie
now is.
And here I have done with the persons.
II. Follows now, to look awhile upon the star that was
presented to these persons, vidimus enim stellam Ejus.
Where we have two things to see to ; the first, that they saw
it was a star : the second, that tliev saw it and knew it to be
His star. Stella and stella Ejus ; these two.
(1.) And first, for the star itself. To know what manner
of star it was, it hath posed not only the greatest astrologers,
(the diviners at the stars,) but the greatest divines too, the
searchers into higher matters than they were able to reach ;
it hath posed them all that ever meddled in it. For when
they have come, any of them, to look too curiously after it,
it hath so dazzled their eyes that like men planet-stricken
they can hardly tell what they say, and conclude about it
they know not Avliat^.
The beginning and the ending of it, the place, the motion,
the splendour, and many other peculiars it had, trouble
them all ; insomuch as some of them, after a great deal of
time and labour lost, are fain to give it quite over, and say it
was nothing else but either the Angel that appeared to the
shepherds, or the Holy Ghost Himself. But though it be
most generally held with St. Austin that it was a new-created
star, yet, as St. Gregory Nyssen' said of it, (for it was an
opinion older than St. Austin",) I see no reason for it at all.
For why might not one of the very stars be now set to move
at God^s pleasure, out of the ordinary way and coui'se of it
for this piu'pose, as well as the sun and the moon were once
made to stand still and not to move at all, for another ?
We will therefore let all other men^s sayings of it alone,
* The various opinions respecting " Proindenon ex illis erathsec stellis
this star have been collected and the quae ab initio creature itinerum suorum
theories respecting it discussed by ordinem sub Creatoris lege custodiunt;
Suarez in 3 Thomge, q. 36. art. 8. disp. sed novo Virginis partu novum sidus
14. § 0. andTostat. in cap. ii. S. Matth. apparuit. S. August., torn. viii. col.
q. 11, 12, 13, 14, &c. 13-5. See also the passage of Suarez
' S. Greg. Nyss., torn. iii. pp. 3 13, last referred to, where St. Augu^tine's
311. edit. Par. 1638. opinion is defended.
302 Whij the mayi were guided
S E 11 M. and rest only in these who say they saw it with their eyes,
•^^^' that a star it was. And if we will now look at it, as they did,
more to increase our faith than to satisfy our curiosity, we
shall find enough in this book of the Scriptures to content
us, and to resolve us all the questions that need to be made
about it. Leaving therefore the exact particulars of it to
Him That first made it, and afterwards ordered it as He
pleased best Himself, and Who indeed only knows what it
Ps. 147. 4. was, (for He can call all the stars by then- names, Avhich no
man could ever yet do besides,) — if we demand why God did
here manifest His Son by a star? three reasons there are
given of it, and being all grounded upon the mysteries of our
faith and religion, they are good and useful for us, all three ;
but there is a fourth that is more sure and certain than they
are, and to that, when we shall come to it, (for I see I shall
be hardly able to reach it to-day,) we are to hold us.
(1.) But first, by a star it was, and no greater light; for
though the Epiphany of Christ would have been more glori-
ous, aud more manifestation-like if it had been made manifest
by the sun, or by the moon, from whence the sound of it
would have gone out into all lauds, and the news of it to
Rom. 10. the uttermost parts of the earth, that the whole world might
P^s 19 4. ^^^^^ l^een stirred up at it, and so set to enquire after it, in
twenty-four hours at furthest; — yet because the fuluess of
the Gentiles was not to come in all at once, they had but
their star-hght at the dawning of the day, but afterwards
they had the sun in his brightness, his full strength upon
them, and then was Christ in His glory; now He was in
His humility.
(2.) But secondly, by a star it was, and no less light ; it was
neither a meteor nor a fire-drake, but a star it was, and a
glorious creature it was. For the stars are the glorious in-
habitants of heaven ; and for one of them to wait upon
Christ's humility here on earth, it was a sign that there was
somewhat more in His person than was to be seen in His
condition; more in that little habitation at Bethlem, over
which the star stood, than was in all the world besides, and
more to be honoured.
Whereof ye shall mark the Evangelists to be ever careful
in mentioning these two together. His humility and His
by the leading of a star. 303
glory, His lowliness aud His niujesty, all His life through.
If lucu be scandalized aud offended at it when they hear of
their Saviour in a cratch, where tliey themselves through
their own i)ridc and luxury had laid Him, let them listen to
the celestial music that the Angels and the quire of heaven Lu. 2. i;].
made about it, as soon as ever they had but named it to the
shepherds. If they think much of His stable, let them look
upon His star. He That was hungry Himself knew how to Mat. 21.
feed many thousands at a time ; and He That died upon the ^^'^ ^^
cross, which usetli to be the greatest scandal of all, was at the 21, &c.
very same time disposing of paradise, which is the greatest Lu. 23.
power of all. Ye shall see a beam of this star still pointing icm-j^s.
to Him, and reflecting again from Ilim, in every thing Lu. 23.43.
He did.
(3.) Thirdly, by a star, as most suitable and agreeable to
them here, that were seen in the stars and read in that book
of the creatures, for the stars were the best books they had.
And where they sought God in His works, God was pleased
to reveal somewhat more to them in His word, and to meet
with them in their own learning^'.
Qui disponii omnia suaviter, as the Wise Man speaks of Piov. Hi.
Him ; God disposeth of all things and applies Himself so to " '
all men, that otherwhiles He becomes that thing to us which
we most affect and study. For He puts no man out of his
way, (always provided that sinful courses and wicked studies
be accounted no ways, for they are de\dations, and running
out of a man's way,) but otherwise the Holy Ghost will pur-
sue every man in his own way, if they be willing to listen
after Him ; and therefore He deals here with these men as
He does often in other places of this book. He speaks usually
in such forms, aud after such a manner, as may most work
upon them to whom He speaks. Of Moses and Da^dd, that Ex.32. 31 ;
were both shepherds before, God says that He took them to p^" -g -1
lead and to feed His peoi^le. To the Samaritan whom Christ Joh. 4. 10.
found at the well, He took occasion to preach to her of the
water of life. To those that followed Him to Capernaum for Joii. 0. 35.
bread, He preached of the bread of heaven, and the food
that should never perish. To them that were fishers. He Mat. 4. id.
tells them that they should be so still, though in a more
" See Tostat. in ii. cap. S. Matth. q. 11.
304 ^VJiy they were thus guided.
S E R M. troublesome sea than they toiled and ^^TOught in before.
^^^' And to these men in the text, accustomed to the study and
contemplation of the stars, He presents them with a star
agreeable to their own employment, that so He might bring
them that way, by their own way, to Himself.
And yet He does it not here by an asterism, but by one
star only, and no more, the better to advance their learning
from a natural and ordinary, to a supernatural and divine
knowledge of Him. For those that are natural astrologers,
Gen. 1.14. to whom, as we read in Genesis, God hath given the stars of
heaven for signs and seasons, they never use to calculate by
one star alone, but most an end by the conjunctions of many
aspects, by constellations and oppositions in the ascendant of
one star against another, which here these men found not.
But this they found, that herein God did not so much put
them out of this way as He set them forwards, and far righter
in it than they were befoi'C.
Be but we willing to have Christ alwaj' in our eye, to make
Him the guide and end of our way, and He will never lead
us out of it, but make use even of our own ways to bring
1 Cor. 9. us to heaven. For He is, as His Apostle was ; He makes
^'^' heaven all things to all men, that He might gain all. To
the man that loves true pleasure and gladness. He presents it
Gal. 5. 22. as all joy ; and to the like ambitious man, as all glory ; to
ilat^ls '^ the merchant-man it is a pearl; to the husbandman it is a
45. rich field. To all men it is made all things, that they might
21.. come all thither to Him.
iCor.o.in. ^jj(| these three are good lessons for us, and good reasons
for the star.
(4.) But there is yet another, to which I must stick closer,
and rely upon it more than upon all these, and that is the
fourth and the last reason of all, if we could pursue it now;
that God might be as good as His word, and found true in
His promise, whereof He never fails.
For He had long since'made'a special'promise to us all, that
this star, by the name of a star, should arise upon us ; orietur
Num. 24. Stella ex Jacob. It Avill take up some time to look upon it well.
But there came one fi'om the mountains of the east, fifteen
B.C. 1452. hundred years before, and saw in his prophecy there, (which
Num. 23. God Himself had put into his mouth,) the same star that the
Tlie subject to be continued. 305
wise raeu" saw here, and the same light that Simeon
saw after, saw it with liis eyes ; we say one of our hymns Lu. 2. 42.
for it there every y day, in memory that tliis promise of
God was kept, and that this prophecy was fulfilled hy it,
the prophecy of orietur stella in Jacob ; M'hich is all the light
we have now or ever they had before us, to bring us all out
of the kingdom of sin and darkness to the kingdom of grace
and glory ; grace here and glory hereafter.
It is a good point, this, to be followed ; but we are now at
a good period to make our stand.
And because both the season is to be regarded, and the
Sacrament to be attended, I will therefore suffer the time to
take me here off from this sermon. There are in the text
both this point and two more, which I propounded to m3^self
at first to be stood upon and considered more at large ; but
there are more Sundays belonging to this Epiphany of Christ
than one, and it will not be untimely both to make an end
of this text and to make our best use of this star, upon any
of them all.
To God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, three persons
and one eternal Deity, be all honour and glory, now and for
ever. Amen.
^ See the autliorities quoted by >' The Nunc diniittis.
Suarez, in 3 Tliom., torn. ii. p. \o\.
COSIN.
SERMON XXIL
CORAM [REGE ET DUCIBUSa] JACOBO, &c.
PARIS. IN FESTO NATIVITATIS CHRISTI. 1(355.
1 Timothy iii. 16.''
Magnum est jAetatis mysterium, Deus manifestatus in came.
Great is the mystery of godliness, God manifest in the flesh.
s E R M. Here is mysterium and magnum, a mystery, and a great
^^^^' one ; and it is not the least nor the easiest part of our office
in preaching, to explain and unfold a mystery, so that every
one may apprehend and understand what we say it is. A
great mystery it is that we are now to speak of ; in which
respect the time and the text are so far both alike ; for this
is a time wherein we keep a great festival in the Church, and
this is a text whereupon we found a great article in our Creed,
the feast and the article of God's nativity and mysterious in-
carnation ; than which there is not a greater that belongs to
our religion. But the greatness is not all. There is, besides
the greatness of the day and the greatness of the mystery,
somewhat else required, both to make up the text and to
make up our duty that we owe too : for it is not only magnum
mysterium, but magnce pietatis mysterium ; — a great mystery,
and a great deal of piety and godhness that goes along with
it ; wherein, if the greatness of our duty may be answerable
also to the greatness of the feast, and be made like to the
" The words enclosed witliin brackets alterations and transpositions, that the
are marked for omission. arrangement intended to be ultimately
'' Tliis sermon abounds with so many adopted is not quite obvious.
Division of the subject. 307
mystery of this text ; tliat is to say, if God's being made
manifest in the flesh may teach us to deny and abandon all
the ungodly and manifest lusts of the flesh ; "whieh is the
great and the proper lesson of this day, the lesson that we
shall hear anon at night, — then, and then only, do we keep a
good Christmas : for this feast is ever so to begin and so to
be concluded, that it may leave the better impression in us,
and learn us how to begin to-day with Christ, to live well all
the year after. To this end is this feast to be ordered ; for
to uo other ends do we observe any times or feasts iu the
Church whatsoever; that, the lesson and the doctrine, and
this, the use of them all.
The doctrine, to confirm us in the faith of Christ ; and the
use, to conform us to the life of Christ : that our godliness
may be as manifest to Him, as His mystery was made
manifest here to us<=.
But to set forth the heads which we intend upon this text,
there are in it four several terms, whereof each term will
make us a part.
I. 3Iijsterium is the first. That there are certain secrets
and mysteries in our Christian religion, whereof here is one.
II. Secondly, Quid sibi vult hoc mysterium, what this mys-
ter}' here is ; and it is Deus mamfestatus in came, God mani-
fest iu the flesh.
III. To which there belongs, in the third place, a quantum,
how great a mystery it is.
IV. And iu the fourth, a quale, of what nature and quality
it is.
Magnum pietatis mysterium. It is a great mystery of piety ;
was so to-day with Christ, and would be no less with us ; for
He looks to have such use made of it. This mystery of piety
to be opposed to all the mysteries of iniquity ; and God's
coming in the flesh to be set against the ungodly and sinful
lusts of the flesh ; for otherwise Ave shall make no more than
a history only of this mystery, and be never the better.
['^ The first words of this verse are, that this mystery was
■^ Then originally followed these controversy of the other.'
words, which were afterwards erased : — ^ The passage here enclosed within
'and that we might give no more con- brackets has been marked by Cosin for
tradiction to the one than St. Paul and omission,
all true Christians after him made a
x2
308 TJie Christian relifjion
S E R M. without controvers}^ ; that is, was so in the Apostle's days, all
— ' — ■- the Church over; aud but for a few unquiet and unruly
spirits of contradiction, that have risen up since, would have
continued so still ; we should have heard of no more contro-
versy about it in our days than St. Paul did in his : but we
meddle with no controversies here. Be it where it will, of
this sure I am, that the true Churches of Christ make none
about it at all. And I presume there are none in this place,
for we are all come out to keep the feast ; I cannot answer
for them that be away and keep it not ; but none of us tliat
are otherwise minded. Therefore did I at first leave these
first words out, and took it for granted, that without contro-
versy this text will pass upon St. Paul's terras of o/xoXoyov-
/xevo)<i ; that is, for an article of our common confession, and
a received truth among us all.
Concerning Avhich truth, though there be among our inter-
preters some difi'creuce in the reading'^, and some in the
sense, yet neither of them is material ; and I shall pray you
to think I make choice both of that reading and that sense,
which I judge to be most sound and agreeable to this
festival.]
Of which that we may speak, &c.
Pater noster, ^r.
I. ' Great is the mystery.' We will first discourse of it a
little in the general, that there are some mysteries in religion.
For as all other arts and sciences have their own proper and
peculiar mysteries belonging specially to themselves, Avhich
are not so Avell known or comprehended by every ordinary
and vulgar capacity, as they are by those that be professed
that way, and have had their wits and their senses long ex-
ercised in them, — so is it in divinity; wherein, besides the
known and universal principles which it hath common Avith
other sciences, there be certain secret and mystical points to
be delivered, which it hath peculiar to itself; there be some
deep and high points of rehgion : whereof the mystery of God
incarnate here in our flesh is but one. The things of Christ
are secrets, all. His whole history is a mystery, and the pro-
•= Namely, 6 or '6s, instead of Qfhs, add Burton's Testimonies of tlie Ante-
concerning which see Vv'olfius, and the Nicene Fatliers, p. 141. 369.
authorities tliere pointed out, to vvliich
abounds ivith mysttrics. 309
ject of it 110 less, wliicli tends all to mystical and high
matters ; the preaching whereof, because otherwhiles they
go cross to the common conceit of carnal and worklly men,
seem to be nothing else but so many paradoxes and un-
reasonable strange things ; as the j)hilosophers said to St.
Paul at Athens, when they heard him preach the things of
Christ there, pei'egrina qucedam infers auribus nostris ; the Acts 17.
masters of those schools were not acquainted with them.
Even moral diWnity is harsh to flesh and blood ; for Ave
preach against sensual pleasures, and they love nothing
better ; we preach obedience, and every man loves to be at
liberty ; we would keep the will and the affections of men in
order, and no man loves to be confined. How will they do
for renouncing the world, and setting their spirits to be at a
continual enmity and warftire against their flesh ! There are
no matters so strange and mystical to men as those two be ;
and yet if it were not for the common mysteries of iniquity,
which most men court and follow, these mysteries of moral
divinity and duties of religion would be plain and easy
enough to them.
But the mysteries and matters of faith, that common sense
and reason do not so usually employ themselves to under-
stand, they are mysteries indeed. I speak concerning Christ
and His Church, saith St. Paul, in which respect this Sacra- Eph.5. 32.
ment is a mystery, this and the other are great mysteries
both. The making of a man a new creature is a mystery,
that is, another manner of person than he was before ; the
resurrection and the life eternal are mysteries. No carnal
man conceives what any of these things are ; they are either
hid from his eyes, or else there is such a beam in his eye that
he cannot see them. But among all these, there is none that
finds a slower and harder behef than this mystery in the text,
nor none that ever met with a stronger opposition.
For it is a mystery in divinity that is no where else to be
learned, no where to be found or heard of but in the schools
of the Prophets and Apostles ; and therefore the masters of
natural reason, that had served their apprenticeship only in
the philosophic schools, and walked no further for their
sanctuary than to Aristotle's gallery, can never be brought
to apprehend it.
310 TJiese mysteries are above reason,
S E R M. It is a high point tliis, and men, natural men, arc short-
'— siglitcd j they see but little, and they believe no more than
they see; whieh makes them incapable not only of this mys-
tery, but of all other the secrets of Christ's gospel, and the
mysteries of His salvation, that arc diffused through the
whole book of God besides.
For indeed the whole project of the Bible is a science full
of mysteries ; and this mystery in the text is the treasury
and storehouse of them all.
And now let not this our Bible-religion fare the worse for
that, that there are so many mysteries in it ; for there be as
many lights in it besides ; whereof, if good use be made,
those mysteries will become the more behoveful for us, so the
2 Cor. 4. 3. more clear to us ; being hid to none, but them that perish in
their own wilful or affected darkness. For in this they perish,
Joh. 3. 19, that the light of these mysteries is come into the world, and
they, because their thoughts and their deeds are e^dl, are then
best at ease when that light is farthest from them ; which is
the true diflFerence between all the mysteries of iniquity and
this great mystery of godliness.
2. Again, we ask no more in divinity than othero'hiles
they ask in nature; where the mysteries be oftentimes so
abstruse and hidden in themselves, that no man's reason is
able to reach them, nor the light of nature clear enoiigh to
find out the secrets of nature itself. In which regard it is
but reason we ask ; that as much be allowed us in our religion
as we allow them in theirs, and that Christ may have His
mysteries as well as any naturalist or philosopher of them all.
In the meauAvhile we preach no mysteries against reason
when we say they go beyond it, for in this case religion and
reason are not opposite, but subordinate ; and where they be
otherwise^, (as in many mysteries of the new divinity among
some of our neighbours they be,) there we must have leave
to suspect them, and avoid them, and oppose them too ; but
where we bring the word and authority of God for them, there
is no more to be said, for then have we aU the reason of the
world to receive them.
And let none of the exceptions trouble us that Julian and
his disciples made once against us. He, and Porphyry, and
' See Scherzer, Collcg. Anti-Socin., p. 21.
not contrary to it. 311
Lucian, ■were three apostates from this mystery of godliness ;
and all they had to say against it was, that it wanted reason ;
for they measured their reason by their lusts, and their under-
standing by their own corrupt affections ; whatsoever suited
not to their carnal principles and the depravations of flesh
and blood, had with them no reason in it at all. And their
disciples are like them, who take exceptions to these mysteries
of religion for nothing more than that there is somewhat in
them which will no way consist with their mysteries of ini-
quity.
For as to their other exception, that we speak mysteries
here in the Church which no man understands, as Avhen we
preach this rnvsterv of Christ^s incarnation for one, God l Tim. 3.
manifest in the flesh, the bare and simple belief whereof and
of other such mysteries, is, as they say, all we have to trust
to, for want of other reason, — this is so far from truth and
reason both, that we can justly say there is never an Apostle,
nor ever an ancient Father of the Church, (who were all as
great masters of reason as any that take their liberty to find
fault with them for want of reason,) none of them all but
will be ready to join with these men upon that title, and
maintain our mysteries of faith upon better reason ; that is,
reason founded upon surer principles, than any be in the
world besides.
For we teach not men here to believe they know not what,
nor any mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, they know not
why ; we believe, saith St. Peter, and we are ready to give i Pet 3.
an account and to render a reason of what we believe. Nor
let any man think that God hath given him so much ease in
this life, as to let him sit still there and make no use of his
reason for the mysteries of the other life. We call it not
faith, that is not grounded upon reason ; and we ground our
strongest reason upon the word of God Himself, That never
spake other.
To us it is given to know the mysteries of His kingdom, Mat. \Z.
and when we know them rightly, to believe them firmly ; for
faith sets knowledge first before it, and then goes beyond it.
Which is the mystery and profession of a man regenerate^
and made a new creature, whereby he hath a new faculty of
f Suggested by the Collect of the daj'.
312 The nativity of our Lord a fact,
SE RM. reason given him and becomes a better man tlian be was;
:f^^^ for in every one of us there be, as the Apostle speaks, two
10. several men, two ditFcrcnt persons in two several respects,
the outward and the inward man. By the outward Ave be-
lieve natural and moral things ; by the inward we believe the
mysterv of the kingdom of heaven, and have our rational
apprehensions exalted to a higher level than they were before;
this by grace, and that by nature ; but both by the grace and
will of God, That hath ordered them both to the knowledge
and belief of His mysteries.
In all which we do not compare the master and the seiTant,
nor make our reason equal to our faith ; and yet we thank that
servant that brings us to his master. "VYe make a great difFer-
ance between the treasure in the chest and the key that helps
to open it, and yet we are glad to have that key ready in our
hands. The faculties of natiu'e are far from being enough ;
but as a candle may kindle a torch, so into those faculties of
natm'e, well employed, doth God infuse the light of faith to
let me in to His mysteries of relio-ion.
And thus much we thought fit to be spoken of these mys-
teries in general. Come we now to the mysteries of this day,
for which we are chiefly come hither, in particular.
II. That Christ was made manifest and born to-day in the
flesh, we have it upon record and by way of history, set forth
both in secular and sacred authors. Of this there was no
doubt at all, for it had the greatest attestation to it that could
Lu. 2. 8. be required in a story ; heaven and earth rang of it. The
shepherds went out from the fields ; and the heralds of
Lu. 2. 9. heaven, the Angels, came down from their celestial mansions
Mat. 2. ], to publish it; and the princes of the earth went forth fi-om
the mountains of the east to wait upon it ; from the shepherd
to the king they enquired after it, and all the streets of Jeru-
salem were filled with the noise and report about it. The
records were likewise fetched, and they found out there both
the person, and the place, and the time, and missed not a
circumstance that belonged to it. All the scribes were con-
sulted, and all the prophecies produced that had been written
of it many hundred years before ; kings, and priests, and
people all together, every one made it their business to attend
to it for the time : and from thenceforth all the world was
3, 4, &c.
no less than a mystery. 313
taken np with the thoughts of it. This, as it presumes it a
great birth, so it makes it a great history ; and if it were no
more than so, it deserves all the outward honour and solem-
nity that we can give it, which is to proclaim the manifesta-
tion of this birth still, and to keep up the memory of this day
alive, that it may never die in our [hearts,] as it is like to do
in theirs who of late have scraped it out of their calendar**.
I go no fiu'thcr in the history ; and yet, as I said, if it were
no more but a history, it is one of the greatest certainty, and
the greatest dignity, and the greatest concernment^ that ever
the world heard of besides.
Indeed the common sort of the world, they look no further
after it and make no more of it than a great holy-day history
at the best ; as it is from year to year remembered here in
the Church, and recorded in the Evangelists.
But the Apostle in this text stays not there, he goes further
than the Evangelists, and looks into the secrets of their story ;
he finds out a mvsterv in this history. Between which two
there are great odds; for men may sit down and hear a
story, and rise up again to go their way without putting
themselves to any further trouble about it. But with a
mystery there is somewhat else to do ; it will busy all their
thoughts, and set the best faculties that they have to work
upon it. So I may read a history, and never wipe mine eyes
for it ; but to see into a mystery, I had need of clean eyes,
and a clean heart, and all ; for the one is but the letter, and
the otlier is the spirit.
I ask then, what spirit is there in this letter ? what
mystery is there in this history of the birth of Christ ? And
the Apostle says there is a great mystery of piety in it.
For the better understanding whereof, we are specially to
take notice of these two words that follow, Deus is one, and
incarnatus is another; that is, the reconciling and the joining
of God's nature and oiu's both together in Christ, which were
so far fallen out and severed asunder before, that if it had
not been for this mystery of piety, Deus would have been the
death of incarnatus ; that is, God would have destroyed men,
'' Namely, tlie dominant puritan tration in Evelyn's ^Temoivs, vo\ i.
party in England, of whose antipathy p. 298, also p. 263. edit. 1818.
to this festival see an interestino; illus-
314 Justice is no less an attribute
s E R M. one and other all the world over, and no flesh had escaped
XXII
'— the power and darkness of hell ; for thus stood the case
Gen. 6. 12. betwixt Him and us. All flesh had corrupted their ways,
'at enmity, and Deus and euro, God's nature and ours, were two'. AVe
and He had fallen foully asunder ; but the fault was ours,
and He was so highly oft'ended with it, that Wrath went out
from His presence and called for Justice to proceed against
us. And Avhen Justice came forth, she came in the shape
and habit of that Angel that stood with a flaming sword in
his hand, ready to strike and execute vengeance upon us all.
Nor had there been any way but that one with us, had not
His mercy been as near and as dear to Him as His justice
ever was, Avhich brovight One to stand before Him That oftered
to give Justice all the satisfaction which she could any way
demand, and so procure our peace for us. For if one might
be got to do that, what could Justice require more ? But all
the mystery was in the person, "Who was able, and Who was
willing to do it ; and That was Christ, in the mystery of His
incarnation, which was this day made manifest to the world.
For otherwise it might never have been done ; no way to
satisfy Justice, but this alone.
Indeed somewhat it was that Mercy had to say for us, and
this she said; What, had God made all men for nought?
would He first make them all, and then destroy them all ? or
would He be angrj^ with them for ever ? What if they had
oft'ended Him ; yet was there any ofl'ence that He might not
pardon ? And thereupon she appealed from the throne of
His justice to the throne of His grace ; for these two thrones
are one above another.
Sedens in solio justitice ; when God sits in His tribunal-
seat of strict justice, it is well known which way the sentence
is like to go ; but sedens in throno gratice, if He might be got
to remove awhile and to sit upon His throne of grace, there
the style of the court might alter, and the terms of proceed-
ing in it be far more favourable. And thither did this
mystery of His piety and mercy carry Him.
Yet even thither did Justice go along with Him, and
pleaded her own case still ; that God must be true and just
of His word, which word was now past, and past recalling.
Ezck. IS. The soul that sinneth, that soul miist die, die here and die
4, 20.
of God than is mercy. 315
eternally ; Adam, and all his posterity after him ; that if the
judge of all the earth would do right, it might not be Gen. 18.
otherwise: all flesh was corrupted and the nature of man r-^" ,. ,.,
' '■ Gen. 0. 12.
universally disobedient, which must therefore answer for
itself. And without this, there was no reconciliation to be
made, nor no satisfaction to be given to justice ; which being
one of God's nearest favourites, and an attribute every way
as essential to Him as His mercy was, must at no hand be
disregarded or s after any wrong.
And thus stood the pleading betwixt them. In the mean-
while we stand before the judge still, and wc know not
what shall become of us.
But there is in one of the Psalms' that we said over to-
day, a final agreement made about all this process between
Justice and Mercy. And the terms are such there, that
Justice itself could hold out no longer nor take any further
exception against them.
For thus it was agreed, that first, truth should be made to
flourish again out of the earth ; that is, out of the nature
and first beginning of man there should another man be
made, that could do as much for all mankind to save it, as
the first man of all had done to destroy it.
This is Veritas orietur de terra, and that is nothing else
but that Christ should be born upon the earth, to renew
the face of it and to set all in order again.
Which no other man could do, who had all undone them-
selves, and put every thing that belonged to their peace and
happiness hereafter clean out of all order, and out of their
own power besides.
But Christ "fi^as first, the Son of God, and being of the
same nature and power with Him, was able to make peace
wdth Him for the sons of men ; and for that purpose would
become one of them Himself; which gave Justice half a
satisfaction already ; for sin and corruption had fouled our
nature, and He would undertake to come and appear in it,
that in His person it might be made pure and clean again.
One for all, in the sight of God's oavti eyes.
So He That was one with God became one with us, that
way might be made to bring God and man both together ;
' Ps. 85. 11, one of the proper Psalms for Christmas morning.
316 Justice and mercy are united
s E R M. as at an unity in His person, so at an union between them-
— '- — '— selves; for to bring tlicsc two together, was all this clone, and
so far is the mj'sterv made manifest to us. Yet Avas not this
all neither, for Justice proceeded on still, and required a fur-
ther matter to be done before her balance could be made even.
She therefore asked if He, That would be born for us,
would be likewise content to die for us too; for without
Heb. 9.22. blood and sacrifice for sin there was no remission of sin to
be granted in any of God's courts whatsoever. But if He
would undertake that and all, she would ask no more ; nor
could she say otherwise but that this would satisfy her to
the full.
For as He Avas the Son of God from all eternitA', so He
Avould be able to do it ; and as He was noAv made the Son of
man, so He would become liable and subject to it. Deus in
came natus, and Christus in morte datus, both these together
Avill tie up the hands of Justice, and let this mystery of piety
and mercy so proceed upon us, that if it be not our own
fault it will be sure to open the way of salvation for us all ;
that our sins may not prove our destruction, which otherwise
they will certainly do and leave us in the hands of Justice,
Avhilst Mercy stands looking on, knowing no other Avay in
the Avorld to help us but this alone.
For herein was both the justice and mercy of God made
manifest, and both preserved in their own full integrity,
extending to all that either of them could ask. When first,
in that nature wherein flesh had sinned, the same flesh was
to be renewed, for else the proceeding had not been just ;
and so came Christ the Son of man to be born. And again,
in that nature Avhich was able to do it Avas a full satisfaction
to be given, or else it Avould never have been giA^en ; and so
came Deus, the Son of God, to be born, Deus incarnatus ; put
both these together, and so have you both the mystery that
is in this text, and the reason that was in this mystery ; you
know both Avliat it is, and Avhv it was, that God was this day
made manifest in the flesh.
Which doth not only exalt this religion that avc uoav
profess and have for Christ, above all others that neither
knoAv His mysteiy, nor shall ever have any part in Piim;
but it confii-ras and settles everv man's faith and conscience
in the mediation of our Saviour. 317
in it besides; that there never was, nor never ought to be, Acts 4. 12.
any other way of salvation ])ropounded to us ; which, because
it is the most proper and the most natural theme for this
day, therefore have we chosen it and stood upon it the
longer.
They that think this day not worth the keeping, have no
great opinion of a Saviour; and they that keep it, but make
so little use of this mystery of piety in it as they do, will
never meet with Him.
But for those bolder wits, the masters and disciples of an
old forlorn heresy, though they take it to be their ovv'n new-
found divinity, who say that Christ came not to satisfy God
for us, but only to teach us what to do ourselves, as if any
other were as able to do it as He; I put them into the
mystery of iniquity, as being men of another trade, and a 2Thes.2.7.
moral worldly religion, that this Christian piety will never
own.
For when all the subtleties and inventions of men are done,
there is none able to satisfy and quiet a man^s conscience
but the manifesting of this mystery in Christ ; nor in this
mystery any other point of it more than what I now preach
to-day, that God hath of His mercy and piety tied up the
sword of His justice and put it into Christ^s hands. Who laid
it to-day bv Him in His cradle, and afterwards took it along
with Him, and nailed it to His cross.
And it is well for us that Ave find it there. Meet it any
where else, and we had as good meet a lion by the way.
Let every one take heed of meeting God's justice out of
Christ's^ hands, or of meeting his own sins out of God's
mysteries ; even those sins that every man was born with will
undo him, but those wherein he is bred and brought up,
much more; unless this magnum ^netatis mysterium may
come in to help him ; which is all the hope and comfort that
we can give him.
And thus much for the mystery itself. The greatness of
it is to follow.
III. The measure of which greatness we take from the
three words here, as they stand in order, Deus, and Deus
manifestatus, and Deus manifestatus in came. These three.
1. First, God is in it, and He makes any thing great.
318 Jesus Christ, although the Son of God,
s E R M. makes tlie person great That was thus made manifest, above
-^^^^ all other greatness whatsoever. And it is as clear a text this,
for the greatness which we believe of Christ's person and
deity, as any we have in all the Scriptures besides. So clear,
that the Arians, of all other places, were posed at this ; and
their later, their Photinian disciples, that the new wits court,
not knowing what to say against it, have made bold with
St. Paul's own word, and blotted Beus'^ here, out of their
Joh. 1. 11. Bibles. Verbum euro, they care not if they give us that, for
those words they can gloss at their own pleasure ; but Deus
caro was too strong and bright a character of Christ for their
eyes to look on. The truth is, they have an envious eye
and are of a malignant natui'e against Christ, and Avill not
suffer Him to enjoy His own greatness, nor to be what He is.
In the meanwhile I wiU not vouchsafe them so much
honour as to dispute the ease with them. It is enough that
this text is evident against them; and if we had no more
but this, it is as much as we need to prove Chi'ist's deity
alone. And they had best let Him alone with it ; for Christ,
above all other things, will least part with His greatness, nor
give any man leave either to lessen His title or to account
meanly of His person.
And let not the scandal of His cratch to-day, or of His
cross another day, offend us; there was a mystery and a
i^lat. 2. 2. majesty in them both. There was a star and a choir of
Lu. 2. 13. Angels over the one, and there was a paradise of His own
■ disposing over the other; Avliich paradise is at no man's dis-
posing, we may be sure, but at God's alone. So God He is,
and God He was, the Lord of heaven and earth both, when
He was at His lowest. And this makes both His person and
His mystery to be great.
2. But then manifestatus in came. How came these tAvo
words to make it great ? for Him That was God to be mani-
fest in the flesh, and to put on so mean a clothing over His
divine and eternal nature, as our human and created nature
is ; what greatness was there in that ? Yes, the gi-eater
condescension, the greater piety ; and the greater piety, the
greater mystery. For this is all mysterium pietatis ; the
goodness of the person augments the mystery, and makes it
J See before p. 308, and Scherzer, Colleg. Anti-Socin., pp. 393, 39*, 521.
took vj)on Him our hvman nature. 319
still grow greater than it was. That He Who had His
dwelling on high, should so much regard the lost and
miserable condition of men here below, as to make their case
His own, and to take that nature upon Him which He would
not do for the Angels ; whose condition in them that fell
was as bad as ours, and their nature far better; — that He
would in no wise look that way upon the nobler creature,
but turn His face and offer all His favours to us, the lower
extraction of the two ; that when both needed it, and both
stood before Him, men and Angels, Spirits and flesh, yet
upon our nature He bestowed a dignity which upon theirs
He did not, that is, did more for us than He did for the
Angels of heaven; what greater piety could He express Heb. 2. 16.
towards us ? Besides, how great an honour our flesh itself,
W'hich, as low and mean as He found it, He made then, and
will make it hereafter, far greater and more glorious than all
the greatness and glory of the w^orld can yield it ; for though
He took it in a low estate to-day, yet within a few days after.
He had kings and princes to fall down before it ; and after Mat. 2. 11.
them He had Moses and Elias to wait upon it, when HcMat. 17. 3.
made it shine like the sun in His brightness ; and when
He had done with it here on earth He carried it up with
Him into His high kingdom of heaven, never left it till He
had gotten it above the Angels, higher than the cherubins
and the seraphins themselves ; which, as it is an earnest how
much He will do for ours also hereafter, so it ought to be a
special motive and attractive to us all, that this mystery of
His great goodness may w^ork upon us and prove in us the
mystery of our great godliness ; wdiich is the point that we
reserved to be the last of all.
IV. And this point is as needful for us as any of the rest,
for without this, all the former points of speculation, which
I set forth before in their order, will do us no good. We
use indeed to hear such points the more willingly, because
they take nothing from us ; they were all matter of benefit,
and good tidings coming together vdth this day to us. But
our matter of duty for all this, that we may be the better for
Christ^s birth, as He was God here manifest in the flesh, we
have not yet.
Points of speculation and benefit are otherwhiles good and
320 Practical lessons from the doctrine.
S E R M. useful for us in their season, as I hope these have been now ;
— - but points of duty and practice are more behoveful for us all;
and I pray God this last may find that effect among us. We
have seen yesterday '^ M'hat Christ hath done for us ; let us see
now another while, what we will do for Him. For our part
belongs to the mystery of godliness.
, To which, if this mystery of Christ, Christ's coming to us
in the flesh, works not in us, the fruit of all His work is
lost towards ourselves, and we keep no such feast for Him as
both He and His Church truly intended it.
There is, as I began to say, in the world a great mystery
of iniqmty and a trade of ungodliness, which is at work all
the year long; a mystery of ungodly and worldly lusts in
the flesh, that are never at rest ; and Christ's coming into the
world was to put down that trade and set up another. For
1 Joh. 3. 8. this cause, saith St. John, did Christ appear in the flesh,
that He might destroy the works of the flesh ; he gives them
a worse name, and calls them the works of the de^dl, which
is the great trade and mystery of all iniquity.
But the mystery of Christ is quite another profession;
teaching us so to live in the flesh that we may live to Him
and bring forth the fruits of the Spiiit, to live so in it that
we may die to it ; which then we do when we destroy and
kill the unlawful deeds of it, when we live to God and die to
sin. This is the mystery of godliness, and the whole scope
of Christ's coming into the world.
For I demand, when He took upon Him to deliver man,
as we say every day in our Te Deum, from Avhat was it ? and
to what end was it that we were delivered ? AVere we
delivered from the hands of justice, that we might return
back to om' old sins and bands of iniquity ? but that were to
throw us and deliver us over into the hands of justice again,
where we should meet with seven evil spirits worse than the
former, and render our latter estate more miserable than it
was at first. This was not it. Then to what end were we
delivered ? Was it that we might bless ourselves for so fair an
escape, and cry out against those that had brought us into
our former thraldom? Or Avas it that we might bless the
sight of the Son of God for it in His Mother's arms, and
'' 1 Joli. 4' ; being tlic second lesson for Christmas Eve.
The object of Christ's incarnation. 321
keep a feast of jo}'^ and honour to Him upon tlie day of His
nativity? Surely all this, if well ordered, may well be done
by lis, and all upon good ground, we have reason to do it ;
but all this is not the end for which He came into the world
to deliver us. The end was, that besides the saying of a
Benedictus to Him, or keeping a festival for Him, Ave should
for this deliveranee serve Him all the days of our life. And
how serve Him ? in sanctitate et justitia ; that is, in holiness Lu. i. 75.
to God, and righteousness to one another.
This is our trade and our mystery of godliness ; we are
bound apprentices to it all the years of oiu* life, from one
Christmas to another, from the font to the funeral, from our
nativity to our dissolution; for the indentures are drawn,
no sooner delivered but bound again presently ; no sooner
Christ born, but at the \evy same time there goes out a
commandment from Him, as well as Augustus Caesar, that Lu. 2. 1.
all the earth should be taxed to pay Him this service.
Look into your Benedictus, which is a hymn that we are
appointed to say daily at our devotions, in recognition and
honour of this daj^^s nativity ; there are a sort ' of mysteries in 'a coilee-
it, of ' visiting,^ and ' redeeming,' and ' raising,' and 'saving,'
and ' delivering His people ; ' but there is never a full stop
in it till ye come to this mystery of serving Him in a godly
and righteous manner of living ; till we come there, all is
suspended. It is the mystery of godliness that makes the
conclusion.
So you see how this mystery works all the way.
It is the property of a mystery, that what it works upon
it makes, or intends to make, like itself. So do the sacra-
ments; for they are mysteries, a part of this mystery of
godliness ; mysteries, if they work upon them that come to
receive them ; and if they work not, they are but mere cere-
monies ; something they signify, but the power and effect of
them is lost. So is it in Christ's nativity ; so in this mystery
of piety. Great mysteries in themselves, but like to prove
none to us, if they breed not the same quality in us that they
carry in their own nature. If it be but a /jb6p<f)cocn<;, as 2Tim.3.5.
St. Paul calls it, and an outward show of godliness, the
mystery and the substance of it that should do us any good
is clean vanished, and retires back again to itself.
COSIN. Y
322 Influence of the doctrine upon our conduct.
s E R M. God Avill have that manifest and real in us wliicli was
J^^^ manifest and true in lliui. That whether we celebrate the
feast of His taking our flesh, or the feast of our taking His,
they may both tend to the manifest and powerful operation
of this piety in the text upon us ; to lead a life that may be
1 Tim. 2.2. somewhat like to His, Whose name we bear, in all godHuess
and honesty.
For when all is done, the greatest honour that we can do
to this flesh of ours, which He hath now taken to Himself
and made all one with His own flesh, is to keep it in such
cleanness and purity as may best beseem the flesh of the Son
of God; so free from soil, so washed and purged from all
unhallowed employments, that at least those mcmifesta opera
Gal. .5. 1!). carnis, the vices of the flesh which are manifest and will be
quickly seen with His eyes, may never appear in it before
Him. There are many of them in the Apostle's catalogue,
that no man may imagine he reflected upon one alone. For
the proud and envious man, the uncharitable and malicious
man, the unreligious and profane person, and a dozen of
them more, are as fleshly there in His account, as either the
intemperate or the incontinent persons be ; they are all alike,
the one as manifest lusters after the sins and vices of the
flesh as the other, all unworthy of any Christian ; specially to
be so manifestly seen, so often practised, so seldom reproved,
so indiff'erently passed by and unregarded as they are ; but
all alike enemies to the mystery of godliness, which we are
set in this flesh of ours (for His sake Who was to-day born
in that flesh) to advance, to encourage, and to magnify
before them all.
And in so doing Ave shall be advanced ourselves, flesh and
all, from this great mystery of godliness, where the text
begins, to the great mysterj^ of glory, where the verse ends.
To which He bring us. That in our flesh is gone up thither
before us, Jesus Christ the righteous; to Whom with His
blessed Father, aud the Holy Ghost, three Persons, and one
eternal Deity, be all honour, and power, and praise, now and
for ever. Amen.
APPENDIX.
Y 2
APPENDIX I.^
AT DLRUAM HOUSE, 5 JAN. 1>1E DOMINICO, lG2'2-[23.]
IN VIGILIA EPIPHANIiE.
St. Matthew ii. 1^ 2.
Now ivhen Jesus was born in Bethlem of Judea, in the days of
Herod the king, Behold there came wise men from the east to
Jerusalem.
Saying, Where is He That is born king of the Jews ? for ive
have seen His star in the east, and are come to worship
Him.
Because we love to speak tempestive, I confess this text
comes a day too soon^ but yet we shall not break square
through much in taking of it ; for howsoever it be now out
of use^ the old"^ Church accounted so highly of the feast of
our Saviour's Epiphany, as for the more honour of it they had
a solemn service in their churches the day before; and all
about that only. So in choosing this text to-day, a day
before his proper season, we shall do no more than what hath
been done before us. And I cannot see how we should have
chosen better ; for to have taken a text that nothing con-
cerned the time, as some of our new brethren use to do, had
been a dishonour to the feast. And to have looked for the
Gospel of the day had been to lose our labour, for there is
never a Gospel for it ; you see the time falls out so as we are
fain to go four days backward for a Gospel, and supply it
with that of the Cii'cumcision, which we used vipon New Year's Lu. 2. u-
^ 21.
" See p. 1. of the present volume. Suicer. Thesaur., toin. i. ji- 1201.
^ See Bingham, xx. 4. § 8, and
326 Fragment of a sermon
Append, day. Now as that Gospel brought vis back to the memory
— of that day, so will this cany us forward to this feast, the
Epiphany of our Lord, that we might be the better pre-
pared to the celebration of it ; and for this purpose I have
chosen it.
And because we have chosen it for that end, it will not be
amiss to say a little of the day, before we come to the text,
that you may the more esteem of the greatness of it.
We are still then at the feast of Christmas, for the twelve
days are not done yet which all attend upon it, but to-morrow
is the last and great day of the feast, as St. John spake of
Joh. 7. 37. another, ' In the last and great day of the feast, Jesus stood
up,' &c. It has been indeed a feast of joy to us all this
while, we cannot but have sense of it, but our fulness of joy
'until comes not while' now; for all this while it has been Evan-
Lu. 2. 10. g^ji^Q i^olis^ tidings of joy which the Angels brought to
"Judffia shepherds in Jury" only, men hard at hand; but now upon
this feast it is onini populo, news which the star brought to all
Acts 28. the world, and to us too, that now salvation was come unto
28
the Gentiles. So, to say well, to-morrow would be our true
Christmas-day, that were Gentiles ; for howsoever Christ was
born eleven days since among the Jews, yet He came not
abroad among the Gentiles till now, and so seemed unborn
to them till He was this day made known and manifest to
them in the persons of these wise men ; Avliich was the reason
that the Catholic Church hath ever so highly accounted of
this feast and made it the greatest of all the twelve, as being
the chief and proper feast of the Gentiles, such as, God wot,
we all were before the news of this dav came. And besides
the religious observation that the good Clu-istians had of it,
the emperors <= themselves in their edicts have made it by law,
for fear people's devotion should cool, to be ranked with the
days of Christ's natidty and His resuiTCction, to be held in
Job. 7. 37. the same honour as these two are. So because St. John said
the last day of the feast was the greatest, I did not amiss at
first to call this the great and last day of our Christmas
solemnity, that we now do celebrate. Last, you see it is, by
the order of the Church, and great withal ; for the great and
"^ The Tiieodosian aiul .Tiistiniau to this effect, arc quoted by Bingham,
codes, and the laws of the Visigoths, xx. i. § 8.
upon the Epiphany. 327
wide -world became the better for it, and was blessed upon it
with the Day-star from on high, the glad tidings of the Gospel i-u. i. 7S.
and of a Savionr's nativity. Nay, at this day came Christ's
divinity to be known, for before now there was little talk or
heed of any tiling but of His humanity only, born in the flesh
upon Christmas-day, and circumcised in the flesh of New-
Year's-day. But upon Twelfth-day now His Godhead shewed
itself from heaven ; and therefore as we have had all this
time to meditate upon His coming in the flesh That was
God, so now the Church would have us meditate upon His
being God That was come in the flesh ; to turn ourselves
from His humanity below to His divinity above ; to behold
it, not with our eves — for His divinity cannot be seen — but
by such heavenly signs as He sent unto us for that purpose,
the star in the firmament.
For because we will be sure to make our feast to-morrow
a great and a high day, higher than the rest, if this appear-
ing first from heaven to the wise men will not do it, we have
two or three more Epiphanies made upon it, of that eminency
that thev would make high davs of themselves : for this dav,
saitli St. Gregory Xazianzen'*, was Christ also baptized for us
in Jordan, and therefore he calls his oration ' De baptismate
Christi,' Epiphania Domini, and the Greek menologies^ call it
the day of His holy baptism ; and so went the ancient ser\ace
of the Church; and accordingly our second lesson at morning
prayer to-morrow, where the stoi*y of His baptism is read
upon purpose. So before, He was shewed as born to usLu. .i. i —
upon this day, and now He is baptized also.
And so much for the dav, which deserved to have somewhat
said of it, that so solemn a time might not pass over our
head without some special regard of it. And now I come to
the text.
The first verse will be all we shall get done to-day, and
here we have to consider,
(I.) A journey undertaken from east to west, a pilgrimage
to Jerusalem; ^ there came from the east to Jerusalem.'
(II.) Xext, what they were that came ; no poor silly pil-
grims, or persons of mean quality, but the sages, the wise
^ S. Greg. Nyssen. 0pp., torn. iii. ^ See Gnar's Ritualc Grsccorum, p.
p. 3()6. 167. edit. 1617.
10. ].
328 Fragment of a sermon
Append, and great men of their country. Ecce magivenerunt, 'There
^ came wise men/
(III.) Let ns take in the end of their coming too ; they
came to enquire after Christ ; and tlien, the suddenness of
their coming ; presently, as soon as He was born.
(IV.) And lastly, we may add the wonder, to them all,
Ecce, ' Behold,^ a matter worth the wondering at; for indeed
they be all strange things. For take them all together, and
1 Kings the queen of the south, that came to see Solomon, was
nothing to be admired as these kings of the east that came
to see Christ, for she came to see and hear, and they to
worship besides ; she to see Solomon, they saying, ' Where
is He that is born King of the Jews ? for we have seen His
star in the east, and are come to worship Him.'
We begin then with the words ; and we will take them as
they lay here in the text, which will bring in all the parts of
the division well enough.
When He was born, then, that is the first; we shall have
nothing to do but with the word 'when;' for the words that
follow, ' Jesus was born in Bethlehem, in the days of Herod
the king/ will fit the day of His nativity better some other
time. Cum natus, 'then,' when Christ was come to the Avorld,
we presently read that these Gentiles came to Him ; for
likely as soon as ever they saw the star upon Christmas-day
morning, they set out betimes, and by this day had got to
Jerusalem ; which makes the text once more proper for the
day. For if they were this day at Jerusalem, and we this
day speaking of their journey and coming thither, I hope we
Prov. 15. shall keep Solomon's rule, speak words in season. 'When'
He was born, then. Before Christ was born we read of few
or none that came to enquire after [Him,] speciallj^ among
the Gentiles; but now He is born they come from the
furthest part of the world. Before Christ came Himself,
admonishing them with this star, the sinful Gentiles, God
knows, had no heart to come of themselves. For as long, &c.
So much for the time ' when' Jesus was born. When He
was born, 'Behold there came wise men from the east to
Jerusalem.' ' Behold,' first, no ordinary matter, sure, but a
thing, &c.
23
upon the Ejjijj/iuny. 329
• ••••*••••
'Wise men/ magi, kings. There be two or three mysteries
ill these words, which I would have you know ; and tlieii I
have done with theii' persons. You see then they are great
men, princes ; and sinful men, magi. Gentiles ; and that their
coming was after the shepherds too, for they had been with
Christ above ten days since. Will you know the meaning of
all this ? Why the Jews were near, and these afar off at the
east? That is nothing. The Jews were near to God, His
own people ; the Gentiles, we, all strangers, &c.
And now we have done with the persons, we come to their
pilgrimage. They came ' from the east.' I will not trouble
you, &c.
' From the east.' A great way off, sure, wheresoever it
was. Not from the next town, or a \dllage hard by; but
a long, from far, like the Ethiopian in the Acts, whom some Acts 8. 27.
think they sent afterwards, that came from the ends of the
earth to worship at Jerusalem. And here the Ecce ! the
wonder, will be set up best of all. 'Behold, there came
from the east,' A hard journey sure they had, says St.
Chrysostom*^, for consider the particulars. It was a long,
first ; many an hundred miles to go, and many a Aveary step
to take. We would have been tired betimes, and never have
held out a quarter of the way to Christ, if we were to seek
Him so far.
Then, secondly, it Avas no comfortable way, but through
sandy and desert places, as the geographers describe their
way, which men have little heart to go through.
And, thirdly, it was no plain way, neither; hills and
mountains, saith St. Chrysostom, all the way.
And, lastly, after all this, it was no safe wa}^, and that was
worst of all ; full of wild beasts, and full of wild men too ; the
hills of the robbers, that David speaks on, were there ; and Cant. 4.
so they are at this day, nothing but dangers by the way. ^' ^"^
And yet through all these difficulties they came to Christ,
and made haste too ; for you see they got to Him in twelve
days. Now the least of these lets would keep us from coming
' S. Chrysost. i. 499; vii. 111. edit. Benedict.
330 Fragment of a sermon, ^c.
Append, to Clirist. If tlic ways to Ilira be tedious, or desolate, or
^ dangerous, why then, no coming with us; we must have it
short, and pleasant, and fair and easy; and very easy too, if
we lose any thing by it ; or else we will be sueh Avise men as
will keep at home. A strange thing that heathen, that dwell
at the world's end, &c.
APPENDIX 11/
If my speeches be but short upon this subject of mortahty,
it will be never a whit the worse ; nor the worse for you,
who endure no sad speeches especially to be long, nor the
unfitter for me, to whom neither this object nor this subject,
if it might have been otherwise, can be very pleasing.
But since a necessity is laid upon me, as St. Paul said in lCor.9.16.
another case, I have left my passion and nearer relations at
home, and I am come hither to do the last office I shall ever
perform to my own ^ loving and dear sister on earth, now, I
doubt not, a glorious saint in heaven.
Nor was this of old out of fashion, though my relations
were yet nearer than they are ; somewhat unusual they were,
but St. Austin *= did as much for his mother, and St. Gregory
Naziauzen '^ for his own father ; and who knows not that
amongst the Romans the next of kin did pro rostris laiidare,
praise the deceased ® ?
And vet I come not so much to praise as to preach ; not
so much to commend her as to commend unto you the medi-
tation of her life and death, and the contemplation of a
better life, for which she hath now exchanged that which she
" It would appear that the sermon this literal signification, as will appear
preached by Cosin upon the funeral of from what is afterwards mentioned con-
Mrs. Dorothy Holmes (printed p. 24.) cerning the family of the deceased,
had suggested the leading idea of the " S. Augustini Opp., i. 123. edit,
present fragment, which appears to fol. Ant. 1700.
have been used upon an occasion some- "• Orat. xix. Opp., i. 286. edit. fol.
what similar. It is without date, but Paris., 1630. Sec other instances
judging from the style of the hand- noticed by Bingham, xsiii. 3. § 10.
writing it was probably prcaclied some- <^ See P. Morestelli Pompa Feralis,
where between the years IGoO and ln35. sivc Justa Funebria Veterum, ap. Grsv.
^ Tliese words must not be taken in Thcsaur. Antiqq. Rom. tom. xii. p. 1405.
332 Fruyment of a funeral sermon.
Append, had hcre among us. And therefore I shall entreat your
attention to the words of the Apostle ^,
AA^'e are come hither to perform a double duty to our dear
sister departed ; one, to commit her body to the ground,
there to be laid up with honour, as in a bed of rest and peace,
until it shall be awaked up again to glory ; another to com-
mend her good name and memory to the world, which, like
a box of precious ointment shed among us all, hath left so
sweet a perfume behind it that our houses are filled with the
odour of it ; and though she be dead, yet shall she thus live
with us still, and be had in remembrance of us all.
Ps. 19. 10. There are indeed, who die and perish altogether, as the
Psalmist speaks, that have left nothing behind them which
is worth the remembering, and therefore are clean forgotten
and gone out of mind as soon almost as they are gone out of
the world. But others there be, saith the Preacher, who
Eccl. 7. I. have been well reported of in their times, and have left a
name behind them that ought not to be forgotten ; and such
examples of Christianity and piety, that they ought to be
Ps. 1 1 2. G. had in continual remembrance. In Avliich number I reckon
this our dear sister (here before us,) and saint deceased.
Concerning whom, therefore, ye shall give me your good
Mark 11.3. leave to break her box of spikenard among you, to fill this
place with some part of that sweet perfume which she hath
left behind her.
Wherein, because as Phavorinus once said, Facit male qui
laudatfriyide^, 'he does not well that commends one coldly,'
truly I would as gladly, as I might very justly, enlarge myself
in this theme of setting forth her virtue and goodness.
But straightened as I am, I must of force straighten my
speech of her also, and give you Avhat I have to say in few
words.
And a few words will suffice for her, of whom if we would
endeavour any long panegyric, any of you might stop me as
the philosopher did him that Avent about with many words to
' Notcxt is given in the mamiscript, s Turpius esse dicebat Favon'nus
but from some expressions ^vhicli are philosophiis, exigue atque frigide lau-
omiiloycd it probably was 2 Cor. v. dari, qunni insectanter et gravitcr vitu-
1,2: ' I'or we know that if our earthly perari. Aul. Gell. Noct. Attic, xix. 3.
house,' &c. " p. 8.37. edit. Lug. Bat. 1 70G.
Fragment of a funeral sermon. 333
commend one of vvliom the world had never spoken but
well, Qais illam nnqiiam vituperavit ? ' who ever discom-
mended her/ or can say she did wilfully wrong to any ?
Her virtues and Christian demeanour had the love of all,
and her loss hath now the grief of many, though this grief
be unseasonable, in regard of the great happiness wherewith
she is now, no doubt, blessed for ever.
Look then on yonder tabernacle now taken down and put
into a coffin ; look upon yon clasped book of mortality, and read
there ; let it, like Philip's morning'* remembrance, tell you of
the vain confidence of your present health, your young and
vigorous days, your sound and able constitutions of body.
See how soon the tent is taken down ; and therein let us all
see how vain a thing we trust to, how weak a reed wc lean
on, when we trust and lean upon this crazy life.
This last week that dead corpse visited the sick ; then \vas
she in perfect health, and yet, behold, now gone before them.
I name the suddenness of her departure, first, because it
most affected us concerning herself; and I wish it might
most instruct us concerning our own selves, that each hour
may be spent on the thoughts of our end, and tliat we may
at all hours be ready, as she was, for Him That calls us
away.
For let no rash censure hence disparage her Christian pre-
paration for death, because she wanted those long and linger-
ing summons which many others use to have. For her whole
life was, as ours should be, no great thoughts of this world,
but a constant expectation and preparation for a better.
For her descent and parentage, if that may be any addition
to her praise, (though I confess that he that boasts of his birth
brags of that which is none of his own,) yet a blessing of God
it is when it is more eminent than others.
And parents she had both eminent and honourable ; her
father a bishop',. her mother of good race and gentry. She
was the daughter of a prophet, him that lately sat here in
this episcopal throne : and that was ever accounted honour-
'' Apparently an allusion to the at- ' As Cosin has not informed us
tendant who daily addre^^sed the mon- where this sermon was preached, we
arch with these words — ' Rememher are unable to avail ourselves of the
that thou art mortal' clue afforded by these words.
334 Fragment of a funeral sermon.
able, saitli Sidonius ApoUinaris, in his praise of Simplicius,
aud \'ouclies it by Scripture ; tclliug us that St. Luke, when
he entered upon the praise of St. John Baptist, held him the
more honourable for that he was descended of the priests'
race. Et nohilitatem vitce preedicaturus, prius tamen extulit
famUice dignitatem ; ' being to praise the nobleness of his life,
he did first set forth the worthiness of his line""/
But of this gentlewoman, our dear sister, I may say, as St.
Jerome' did of Paula, the holy Roman ladv, she was nobilis
genere, sed nobilior sanctitate, ' noble in race and parentage,
more noble in grace and holiness.'
Truly her good life, aud not her birth, had it been more
great than it was, made her truly considerable. And herein
detraction itself dares not deny her her due.
For her virtuous and pious disposition, Arhich I will com-
mend in her and commend to you, this I may say, that her
Mat. 25. 4. care and study was like that of the wise virgins, ever to
keep the oil of piety burning in the lamp of her soul. The
oracles of God were as ornaments to her ears, and the attend-
ance of His service, with the performance of many other
Christian duties, were as bracelets to her hands, and in more
esteem with her than all other vanities of the world.
From whence ye may gather what her education was, that
religious it was and virtuous, tending to all things that might
produce in her the effects and works of a godly, righteous
and sober life ; which is the sum of all Christian religion.
Her disposition, how sweet and gentle it was, her de-
meanour, hoAv modest and aflPable, her words and deeds, how
fair aud inoffensive they were, I need not say; they that
knew her well and conversed Avith her, will ever say it for me.
Let this be one note of her more thari ordinary goodness.
Her mother, though a grave and severe gentlewoman in the
education of her cliildren, hath often professed that she could
never take her so much as with an oath or a false relation of
any thing, or any other gross fault of cursing, self-A^ill, or
stubbornness, in all her life.
She was first, a \ii'gin full of modesty and constancy;
afterwards a wife, tender, lo\dng, and obedient to her hus-
'' See Gallaiulii ]5ibl. Tatr., toin. x. ' S. Hieron. Ep. xxvii. inter Opp.,
P- 525. toiii. i. p. 72. edit. Ant. 1578.
Fragment of a funeral sermon. 335
band ; so careful for liim that to shew her daily regard towards
him, she was careless either of her own will, or ease, or plea-
sui'e ill any thing ; which we have, as of our own observation
of her while she was alive, so from the free and voluntary
confession of him, both before and since her death. One
that never was heard to have given any unkind or disre-
spected word in all her days ; and continued her love and
regard to him, even in her latest sickness, to the last.
Neither did her love to him make *her forgetful of a greater
and far higher love, her holy regard that she ought to God.
So sudden and ^■iolent a sickness as befel her would have
driven many of us to impatience ; yet from the first to the
last she was not heard to utter any word which might any
ways misbeseem the humility and patience of a good and
well-grounded Christian.
In the very extremity of her disease she would always freely
resign herself to the pleasure of Almighty God, and heartily
invoke the comfort of our Sa\iour Christ Jesus. When they
came and prayed God to strengthen her, her answer was,
' Yea, strengthen her faith,' (whereof she had more care,) ' if
not her body,' Avhereof she had less.
And to give you a testimony of this care of her soul ; being
desired by her husband, at the beginning of her sickness, to
remove into a warmer room and to change it for a better, her
reply was all holy and heavenly, with prayer that God A^ould
grant her patience, and that then she should expect a better
change, when God should remove her into His own chamber,
this house here and building of God, not made with hands, 2 Cor. 5. i.
but eternal in the heavens ; and should change her vile body
and make it like to His glorious body for ever. Pliil.;3.2i.
And after her speech failed her, yet did she understand
and perfectly hear, and most willingly join with them that
used prayers and devotions for her. In which words of piety
and devotion, presently after her desu-e of absolution, moving
her dying lips and lifting up her half-dead hands in prayer,
as Paulinus"^ writes of St. Ambrose, she died most quietly,
and departed out of the world in great peace both of body
and soul.
™ Vita S. Ambrosii a Paulino con- par. ii. col. xij. edit. Beiied.
scripta, § 47. inter Opp. S. Ambros. ii.
336 Fragment of a funeral sermon.
Append. "And yet, as St. Ambrose liimself said of another, non obiit
_iLi_ sed ahlit, she is not dead, but gone away only before us to a
better abiding than any here is in this vale of tears below ;
or as Nazianzen", of a like saint, ' This was the manner of
her lapng down this her earthly tabernacle, or to speak
more properly, of the assumption of her blessed soul into
heaven;' where, as in Abraham^s bosom, we will leave her
in peace, resting with Christ, as we verily trust, in eternal
glory.
To which, &c.
" S. Ambros. de Obit. Valent. inter goniae, inter 0pp., toiii. i. p. 120. edit.
0pp., torn. ii. 186. edit. Bened. 16-30.
" S. Greg. Nazianz. in laudem Gor-
APTENDIX 111.
URANCErATH.
DOMINICA SECUNDA POST TRINITATEM. 1628.
St. Luke xiv. 16—20.
A certain man made a great supper, and bade many ;
And sent his servant at supper time to say to them that were
hidden, Come ; for all things are now ready.
But they all at once began to make excuse. The first said, I
have bought a farm, and I must needs go see it ; I pray thee
have me excused.
Another said, I have bought five yoke of oxen, and I go to prove
them ; I pray thee have me excused.
And another said, I have married a wife, and therefore I cannot
come, i§c.
I SHALL open my mouth lierc to-day in a parable^ but I Ps. 78. 2
shall speak no hard sentences of old. For though there be
parables that are obscuri sensiis, hard to be understood, yet
this is none of them. An easy and a familiar similitude it
is ; -which every one will be ready to conceive that knows
what a gi-eat supper, or a great farm is, or that can skill of
five yoke of oxen, and tell of a sixth, which is a married
wife.
To such low comparisons doth Christ otherwhiles descend,
that the knowledge of His kingdom, being hidden from the Lu. 10.21.
wise and prudent, who think too basely of it, might be re-
vealed to the ignorant and babes, even in their own terms
and language. For them of the country here, he compares it
to husbandry; for them of the city elsewhere, to merchan- ^lat. 13.
dise ; for sea-faring men, to fishing ; for way-faring men, to ^^'^^,^, j^
cosiN. Z Is. 35. 8.
338 Fragment of a sermon, ^c.
Append, a voyage; and because there be some wliicli never come
— ^— — abroad^ they shall know it by their leaven which they keep
33^*" ^" at home ; every one by that which suits their disposition and
apprehension best : and all these for our readier and often
applying of these sensible and outward things to those inward
1 Cor. 2. 9. and heavenly matters, which neither eye hath seen, nor ear
hath heard ; that having the 7rp6deai<i of the similitude, as
farms here, and oxen, before our eyes, we might of om'selves
make the aTroSotrt?, and preach more sermons by far with ease
than we can possibly hear with pain.
Otherwhiles some men are wont to complain of obscurity
and hardness to understand our Gospel, here they shall have
no cause to do it ; of keeping house and making a feast, of
bidding guests and making excuses, who hath not heard ?
Ye shall now hear of them again. And by these similitudes
ye shall learn both to conceive what that heavenly feast is,
which God hath made for you in the kingdom of grace here,
and prepared for you in the kingdom of glory hereafter ; as
also to consider what an unthankful wretchedness it is, to let
farms, or oxen, or wives, or whatsoever else you use to leave,
call you back from it, when you are hereunto so often in-
vited.
APPENDIX IV.
Psalm cxxii. 6.
Rogate pacem . . .
Pray for the peace of Jenisalem, they shall prosper that love it.
The text is as the day is, tending both to rehgion andseep. loG-
peace ; the day a public acknoAvledgment and thanksgiving^
and the text a pubUc desii'e for the estabUshment of a
rehgious peace and quietness in our Jerusalem, both in
Church and commonwealth.
And as there is no gi'eater blessing to a state than to enjoy
that peace, so is there not any means more available to pro-
cure it, nor any more effectual to preserve it, than what this
text here prescribes us, rogare pacem, to come out and pray
for it ; as the provident piety and wisdom of the state hath
at this time appointed us ; thanksgiving and prayer.
There is in the text a precept and a promise. A precept
for prayer, and a promise for prosperity ; it will be the pre-
cept only that I shall treat on to-day. And because it is a
day of thanksgi\dng, therefore have I chosen a precept out of
a psalm, which makes it to be prceceptum cantabUe, the better
for that ; a precept that may be sung, and a commandment
that may be performed with cheerfulness and delight.
And let it not trouble any man that I call it a precept ;
for though it may seem to run in terms of wishing and
adAdce only, as we read it in our Psalter, yet are we to make
account that the Holy Ghost adviseth and wisheth nothing
* It is probable that the sermon, of with Spain, December 5, 1G30, (Rushw.,
which this is a fragment, was preached ii. 75,) but the editor has met withno
either upon the peace with France, evidence to shew that a thanksgiving
June 10, 1629, (Rushwortli, ii. 23, 44; was appointed upon either of these
Echard. ii. 88 ; Rymer, xix. 87,) or that occasions.
z 2
340 Fragment of a thanksgiving
Append, here but that which carries the nature of an edict and an
'- — injunction along Avith it; for ever in His optative there will
be found an imperative, not to fail, if cither we have any will
or any affection that come to hear it.
In this precept then there are these things considerable.
(1.) The Church and the state first; both set forth under
the title of Jerusalem.
(2.) The religious care and love that is to be extended to
either ; expressed in the word rogate.
(3.) And thirdly, the felicity and happiness of them both;
which is comprehended under the title and blessings of
peace.
All M'hich will fall out to be the heads of our present dis-
course. But now before I speak any further I shall desire
you to help me with your prayers unto Almighty God for the
assistance of His Holy Spirit, &c.
(I.) We begin mth Jerusalem ; which, as it is described
Prov. 15. here at the second verse, gives us our opus diei in die suo ;
being a city or a kingdom that is at unity in itself, and at
peace with other cities and kingdoms abroad ; as our Jeru-
salem now is.
This Jerusalem is the subject upon which we are to work,
and the body for which the Holy Ghost would have every
man to be careful. Jerusalem, wherever we find it, (and
theirs was but a shadow of ours,) is a body that consists of
two parts ; and those two parts be the Church and the
kingdom ; the Church at the first verse, called the house of
the Lord, and the kingdom at the fifth, called the house of
king David : and both these houses stood joined together.
So that Jerusalem stands not here for the city and the
state alone, nor for the temple and the Church alone, but for
both together united in one body ; either of them will make
up but one Jerusalem.
Where, at the first we see (and it is a good sight to see),
God's house and the king's, the Church and the state, in a
near conjunction. A happy conjunction when these two are
met together in Jerusalem ; in Jerusalem or in any city, in
any place or kingdom besides.
To these thus joined together by God, what is our duty ?
23
sermon for peace. 311
First, as we fiud them close joined to our hands, so to keep
thera. Homo tie separet ; not to sever them at any hand, for Mat. 19.6.
they arc like twins; the happiness and hfe of the one
depends upon the happiness and hfe of the other; they will
grow and fade, they will hve and die together. Then homo
ne solvat, not to make the knot of amity and peace between
them more slack or loose than it is here in the Psalm, where
they are united and Avoven up together so close, that as the
kingdom and the house of David shall be ready to serve the
liouse of God and to seek the prosperity of His Church, so
shall God be ready to enlarge the prosperity of the kingdom ;
and propter domum Domini, (as it is in the last verse,) even
for the Chm'ch's sake. He will do the kingdom and the
commonwealth good.
Therefore look to this well, not to sever them ourselves, and
not to endui'e them that are tampering about it. Not Avith the
papist, that would pull down God's house which is amongst
us, and set up their own ; not with the Anabaptist, that would
pull down king David's house clean, no king nor kingdom in
Israel, they, but every one a king in his own cottage ; not
the libertine and atheist, that would pull down all, and leave
us neither God's house nor the king's, neither any religion
in the Church, nor any government in the state, so every
man must do what seems good in his own eyes.
But set this down for a rule, that as we are members of
both, so we are to be careful to preserve both, and to join
together for the good and prosperity of them both.
And set this down withal, that there is no surer friend, no
surer stay to a kingdom, than to be careful of religion ; and
as on the one side that it is a sure sign of a good religion, if
it will join to uphold the state of the kingdom, so on the
other side it is an infallible note of a bad one, if it shrinks
up the sinews of ci\al obedience'^.
Yet a sort of men there be with whom Jerusalem is not as
it would be. Some that are so zealous for the state and the
commonwealth of the kingdom, that religion is quite set
aside, and the commonwealth of the Chm'ch clean forgotten
among them ; and other some so zealous for the Church . .
And an evil iise it is that has possessed the world, when
^ The folknviiig passage is inarkt-d for oiuissioii.
343 Fragment of a thanksgiving sermon.
Append, commonly we cannot affect one part of Jerusalem but we
'- — must presently fall cither to despise or neglect the other;
raise the price of one virtue, and cry down all the rest to
nothing. "\Mierein two sorts of men are most faulty ; zealots
both, and both disturbers of our peace. They that are all for
the temporal, the house of David, to swallow up the house of
God ; and they that are all for the spmtual, domus Domini,
the house of the Lord, to take up all the room, and to justle
out the house of Da^-id ; as if there could be no affection
shewn to the one, unless there be some stratagem to destroy
or disgrace the other. But so hard a matter it is, and ever
Ps. 122. 3. was, to keep Jerusalem at unity within itself, or for stirring
and hot humours to hold a mean. For in the one of these
there is a false religion, and in the other there is none at all.
Our care then to be that either be preserved in his right.
God hath coupled them here ; and since God hath coupled
Mat. 19. G. them, let no man put them asunder.
The sum is, that to be careful for God's house and the
Church is to be a good Christian; to be careful for the
king's house and the state is to be a good subject; and both
these are in God's eyes most acceptable. Yea, and it will
ever likewise be found true, the better Christian the better
subject ; and the more religious towards God and His house,
the more obedient towards the king and his laws ....
APPENDIX V/
St. Matthew xiii. 27, 28.
So the servants of the householder came and said unto him,
Sir, didst not thou sow good seed in thy field? From
whence then hath it those tares ?
He saitJi unto them, The envious man hath done this.
This is that wliich we call the parable of the tares. The
text does neither begin nor end it ; it is but a little part of
it ; yet as little as it is, it brings into it the substance of all
that which went before it, that we may be sure we shall have
matter enough to hold us discourse for that little while that
I am to hold you here. For the latter part of the parable,
Avhich is about the cleansing of the field, we think that may
deserve an entire discourse by itself; so we will let that
alone. But for the former part^ which is about the sowing
in of the good seed, and the growing up of the bad tares,
that we have all here in the text to be despatched now.
There are three verses of the parable that go before the
text, and they are all to be found in it ; the last of them is
fetched in by the first word of this ; ' so,' or, ' then the ser-
vants came.' ' Then,' they came ? AVhen ? Why when
the blade was sprung up and the tares ajDpeared, then the
servants came.
There is one verse that we must necessarily have a reflec-
tion upon, not to discourse of it amply, but only to give a
touch at it, as it touches the text. Then for the first verse,
* This aud the two following frag- editor is by no means sure that the
meats of sermons upon the same text arrangement which he has here adopted
are so disarranged, apparently by the is the most accurate,
hinder of the MS. volume, that the
314 Fragment of a sermon
Appknu. the man that sowed good seed in His fiekl ; that is here
'- again in so many words, ' Sir, didst not thou sow good seed
in thy field ?' And lastly, for the second, the enemy that
came and sowed tares and went his waj^ ; that is here too in
the words that follow, 'These tares, the envious man has
sowed them/ So by keeping of ourselves to this part of the
parable, we shall have the advantage ; and by these two
verses, despatch the three that went before them.
And now we have them in, you shall see we will go out no
more, nor meddle with them more than needs must, but keep
our meditations close to the words of the text itself, which
brings these other in ; not as men use to have incoherences
for want of matter, but it has a natural reference to them,
whether we would or no.
The words that I have read, then, are a conference or a
consultation betwixt the householder and his servants, that
is, God and man, that we may make no more ado about that ;
and the consultation is about the tares that were seen to
spring up in a good field ; Avhat should be the cause of them,
or how they should come there. And so for the parts of it,
we have thus many.
To begin withal ; we have first their confession on God's
behalf.
Before we can go on, the first word stays us to take in the
verse that goes before, or the connexion of them together;
so for
And in the resolution of it, though men of our day cannot
agree, yet it were to be wished some of them had a little of
that modesty which the servants had here ; who by no means
would be brought to lay any fault upon God, but take it for
certain that He is the sower of none but good seed, and then
we should have no pious ears off"ended with these harsh con-
sultations ; that the sin of Adam was per occuUuni Dei de-
cretum, and that without His decree, no detestable or evil
thing is done ; and that it was necessary that men should
sin ; that Dens liahuit opus peccatore, had need of sin, as
being not able otherwise to come to His ends that He aimed
at; with other such strange doctrine, that our new masters
have of late fished out of the lake, where at the bottom cer-
upo7i the parable of the tares. 345
tainly lay some Mauicliec*^ or otlicr tliat taught it them, who
yet nevertheless were ashamed to put it upon God Himself,
as if He Averc the author of any evil. That had sowed good
seed : and therefore they made another god for it, a black
god besides their white one, as you have heard of black and
white devils. This is that opinion which St. Augustine ^ Ijeing
infected withal at first nine mIioIc years, as himself confesses,
did afterwards abhor so much; which I tell you, that we
might abhor it as much as he ; though some Avould make
him come somewhat nearer it still, when he writes in his
heat against Pelagius. I will not stand to dispute it, it is all
to maintain their absolute reprobation, which certainly will
never be defended u.nless this text and the whole Scripture be
erased, and God made the cause of these tares.
That is the nature of an envious man, he can endure to
see no mane's field prosper; as long as it lies fallow, he is
content withal, but if God once ploughs up the fallow ground
of our hearts, and sows good seed in them, then in comes he
with his tares too ; and if God prepares us with His grace, he
will spoil us with his baits ; and the more bountiful that our
God is towards us, the more envious ever is he. So there
was but one unclean spirit in the man at first, but when he
was cleansed and his house made clean and garnished, then Mat. 12.
for very spite he comes again himself, and seven other with ^*' "^f; „^
. . . . iiu. 11.26.
him worse than he. This is because, as the text saith, he is
an envious man, that you may know he has not his name for
nouirht.
'o'
Now the text is done ; but if I shoidd leave off here, we
that are men should go too freely away. For is the devil in
all the fault, an we say, to keep us to the text, he did it the
more enviously, because he did it when we were asleep ; for
else perhaps we might have been too ware of him.
I mean tajres of doctrine, as well as tares of life and
•* See Heylyn's Quinquarticular tained in the eleventh volume of the
History of the Western Churches, Benedictine edition of his works, lib. i.
chap. i. §^3. Tracts, p. 506. edit. 1681. cap. 6. § !■.
"^ See the Life of St. Augustine con-
346 Fragment of a sermon
Append, manners. And tliousrh the Church of Rome wonkl fain
V,
make us believe that she cannot err, that the devil has no
power over her to sow tares there, and that the pope is such
a watchful \-igilant man as he can never be overtaken with
any error ; yet see the luck of it, they have eight several times
confessed in their synod of Trent that hominum incuria and
temporum injuria'^, just as it is here. While men were
sleepy and negligent, many abuses and tares have crept into
their masses, and images, and indulgences.
Now then for a conclusion of all ; since we have found out
the cause of all these tares and e\il in the world, if we would
not be troubled with it we must remove the cause from
whence it comes, we must not think so much of the tares as
we must see the cause of them ; for if we go to remove an
evil and remove not the cause of it, we shall go the wrong
way to work ; as they use to say in physic, If ye remove not
the cause of a disease, but apply medicines to the part affected
only, well may you have ease for a while, but when it comes
again the sickness will be far worse than it was before. And
if we go about to remove the cause, we must be sure to take
the true one ; for if we take one for another, run to God
Gtn. 3. 12. when it is the devil, or say as Adam did, It is the woman
that made me do it, when it was himself; as they say again,
we may make up one breach, and fall into a worse, heal a
fever with cramp. So then, since we know what the true
cause is of all tlie evil that is in the world, the envy of the
devil, and the negligence of ovir ownselves, these are the two
things that we must take away. Nay we shall not be put to
so much, let us but take away one, and the other will tarry
Mat. 2k away of itself. It is our saving caveat that He gives us to
"' *" '^' watch, for then the thief will not come ; the devil knows it
well that he can do but little good with us if we will but keep
ourselves but waking, and how is that, but by continual em-
ployment of ourselves about God^s service, to be instant at
prayer, to be devoted to His sanctuar}^, to be given to all
good works ; this is to keep our eyes open ; for if these
things be not done of us, why then our souls are lulled asleep
'' Scss. xxi. l)e coniimm. sub utra- trina de Sacramento Matrimonii, etc.
que vSpecie, cap. i. ; Sess. xxiv. Doc- Binii Cone, torn. ix. p. 399, HI.
upon the parable of the tares. 3 1'7
by the charms of the flesh and the vanities of the world, and
so the devil breaks in upon [ns] ; and as the priests would
have the soldiers say, steals Christ away from us while we are Mat. 28.
asleep; and when Chi'ist is gone, we lay still, and let him '^'
sow what tares in our hearts he lists. And we had need take
the better heed of it ; for though he does it out of envy, yet
he does it subtilly : as long as he has us in a sleeji, he can
make us dream that there is no such matter, ])ut that he
docs all out of good Avill to us ; make Paul think he does God Acts 26. 9.
good service, when he makes havoc of Christians' blood ; and Acts 8. 3.
the people think they are very zealous for the law, when they
cry to have Christ crucified ; and though he be the prince of
darkness, yet for the time he is an angel of light; come to 2Cor. ii.
us with a psalter in his hand and tell us we may venture a , ,'
fall of the pinnacle, it would do us no hurt at all, the cherubin
would hover under us with their wings ; and so bring us to
avarice, and make us believe and dream of nothing but pro-
vidence ; and to pride, while we dream of nothing but honest
dignities. What, he envious ? No, he is acquainted Avith
Jesus and Paul too ; here is no enmity betwixt them, and so Actsi9.i5.
far from envy to us, that if we be restrained by God, yet he
would not grudge us the best fruit in the garden. And thus Gen. 3. 4.
with his subtilties, if we be not watchful and aware of him,
he overtlu'ows and spoils all the good that God has formerly
bestowed upon us ; and therefore if ever, certainly it is now
time to awake, we that sleep, and to stand up against these
assaults of the devil. If we will fold our arms and embrace
the pleasures of the world, and sleep on, no marvel though
our field be grown full of thorns, says Solomon ; if the Prov. 24.
mariners be asleep the vessel will quickly suffer shipwreck ; '^^'
and if the watchmen wake not, the city is soon taken.
' Watch therefore, that ye enter not into temptation.' And Mat. 26.
that God, to Whom Ave pray every day that we may not be '^^'
led into it, keep us from all spiritual drowsiness ; that when
the devil comes he may find us waking and go his ways, and
when (Christ comes He may find us watchers for Him, and
take us witli Him out of His own field, into everlasting
tabernacles. To which He, &c.
APPENDIX VI.
PARIS, EVANGELIL'M DOMINIC^E QUINTS POST ElMTHAJilAM, I Go 1 .
St. Matthew xiii. 24.
Simile est regnum cmloruni homini seminanti in agro, ^c.
The kingdom of heaven is like unto a man that sowed good
seed in his field :
But ivhile men slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among
the wheat, and went Ms way.
But when the blade was sprung up, and had brought forth fruit,
then appeared the tares also.
So the servants of the householder came and said unto him. Sir,
didst not thou sow good seed in thy field ? from whence then
hath it tares 7
He said unto them, The envious man hath done this. Tlie
servants said unto him. Wilt thou then that we go and
iveed them up ?
But he said. Nay ; lest while ye gather up the tares, ye root up
also the ivheat with them.
Let both grow together till the harvest : and in the time of
harvest I will say to the reapers. Gather ye first the tares,
and bind them together in bundles to be burnt ; but gather
the ivheat into my barn.
Append. Which parable Clirist Himself liath explained for us iu
-* the thirty-seventh verse.
He that sowed the good seed is the Son of Man ; the field
is the world ; the good seed are the children of the kingdom,
but the tares arc the children of the wicked one ; the enemy
that sowed them is the devil ; the harvest is the end of the
world, and the reapers are the Angels. He that hath ears
to hear, let him hear.
Fragment of a sermon, S^c. 349
This is tlic last Sunday after tlic Epiphany, and this the
last Gospel of them all ; being so ordered hy the Church,
because it is the last Epiphany, that is, the last manifesta-
tion, that Christ will make of Himself to the world, when at
the end of it He will come to Ilis harvest, and bring His
reapers with Ilim.
It is a parable that runs all upon a similitude between the
estate or condition of Christ's Church, and the sowing or
growing of a field.
For by the kingdom of heaven here, both in this place, and
through this whole chapter, there can be nothing else under-
stood but His Church in all ages, I will give you the reasons
for it by and by.
But I shall first set forth the parts of this parable, and tell
you in what order and method I wall proceed with them all.
Three general branches there be in it, which extend and
dilate themselves into many other particulars.
(1.) The field first, which is the world, and the resemblance
of Christ's kingdom here, which is the Church ; sowed both
with good seed and over-sowed with Imd. A Church that
hath both wdieat and tares spread in it. That will take up
two verses.
(2.) Then the discovery of these tares, and the discerning
of them, after they were grown up, from the wheat itself; that
will take up another.
(3.) 'And thirdly, the consultation here had about them,
between the servants and the master of the field, both how
those tares came in, and how they should be gotten out ; and
this takes up all the rest.
It will be all we can do to-day to view the first of these
three, wherein, after we have taken notice of the Church, how
it is here called, and how compared, we shall have no less
than six points to consider in Him that sowed the good seed
there ; and as many in him that sowed the bad.
In the first the sower ; and second, his sowing ; third, the
seed ; fourth. His good seed ; fifth, the field ; and sixth. His
own field; these six in the former.
II. In the second, then the enemy; and second, his sowing ;
third, the tares, which are his own ; and fourth, the ground,
which is none of his own; fifth, the time that he takes to
350 Fruyment of a sermon, ^c.
Append, coiiic, when men are asleep : and sixth, the haste he makes to
— — '- — be gone as soon as ever he lias clone the mischief. These six
in the latter.
Upon all which, as likewise npon all the rest that are to
follow hereafter, that Ave may the better attend them and
make a religions and spiritual use of them, Christ hath here
set His epiphonema, and charged us to give good ear to them.
' Let him that heareth hear.^
And that we may both hear and speak of these worthily,
as we ought to do, to the honour of Almighty God, the pre-
servation and advancement of His true and uncorrupted
rehgion among us, let us beseech Him to assist us with His
grace and heavenly benediction, &c.
Oui' Father, &c.
And lastly, this field is His own -, His own by inheritance,
Heb. 1. 2. for He is the heir of the world. And His own by pui'chase.
Rev. 5. 0. for He redeemed the world ; He bought it M'hen it was sold,
and paid dearly for it ; Avhich gives Him His sole right in it,
and allows no other, either any power to dispose of it to
whom they think fit, or any liberty to order it and sow it
with what grain they please, that never came from Him.
II. And so I come to the second part, to him that came
into this field after Him, and there sowed the tares.
Who is first called here the enemy, and afterwards said to
be the devil, and such as he sets to work under him.
APPENDIX VII.
PARIS, JUNE 11, 1()51.
DOMINICA PRIMA POST TRINITATEM.
St. Matthew xiii. 24, 25.
Simile est regnum coelorum homini seminanti in agro, &,-c.
The kingdom of heaven is like unto a man that sowed good seed
in his field.
But while men slept, his enemy came and sowed tares among the
tvheat, and ivent his ivay.
Here is a parable propounded, Avhicli is afterwards ex-
plained by Christ Himself to be intended of His Chnrcli;
the state and condition whereof, as it is now at this present,
besides the beginning and the progress, and the ending of it,
as it hath been heretofore, and as it shall be in time to come,
are all set forth to us under their several similitudes. And
first, it is compared to a field ; a field as large as the world,
sowed by Him with good seed, and by His enemy over-sowed
with bad. In either of which we have no less than six points
to be considered ; six in Him, and as many in His enemy.
These six in the former; (1.) the sower, (2.) and the
sowing, (3.) the seed, and (4.) the good seed, (5.) the field,
and (6.) His own field ; ' Who sowed good seed in His field. ^
And these six in the latter; (1.) the sower, (2.) and the
sowing again, (3.) the tares, which are his own, (4.) and the
ground, which is none of his own, (5.) the time that he takes
to come, (6.) and the haste that he makes to be gone ; ' Who
came while men slept, and sowed his tares among the wheat,
and presently went his way.^
This is but the beginning of the parable, it may be we
shall go through with the rest of it hereafter, till we come to
352 Fragment of a sermon
ArPF.ND. Christ's epiphonema and charge set upon it at the end of all,
He that hath ears to hear it, let him hear it/
And that we may both hear and speak of it to the honour
of Almighty God and the preservation of His true religion
amongst us, &c. &c.
' The kingdom of heaven/ Here we stay first, that we
may see before us.
For by the kingdom of heaven here, is not meant the
kingdom of glory, that we are to live in hereafter ; but the
kingdom of grace, that we live in now ; which is the true and
the \isible Church of Christ here upon the earth.
And vet it is called the kingdom of heaven, this, in these
several respects. First, because it is always opposed and set
against the kingdom of sin, that that may not reign over us,
nor set up a throne in our hearts. There is a heaven upon
earth, when we are once got out and set free from the
tvi'annv and dominion of sin.
(2.) Because the dcAdl taketh upon him to be a king, and
hath prevailed so far upon the sons and daughters of men,
that the greatest part of the world is subdued unto him. In
Joh. 14.30. which regard our Saviour calls him the prince of this world,
2 Cor. 4.4. and the Apostle, the god of this world. Against this king-
dom of the devil God sets up another here of His own, which
He calls His Church, and the kingdom of His Son, "Whom
He sent from heaven with a sceptre in His hand; 'I have set
Ps. 2. 6. My King upon My holy hill of Sion ; ' ' the sceptre of His
Ps. 45. 6. kingdom is a right sceptre.' That sceptre is His word, held
forth to us in the Scriptures ; and they that are out there,
are out of His protection, what patronage soever they may
find besides.
For (3.) He that sits upon His throne in heaven is the
Head of that Church, and rules over it by His own laws ; by
exercising His power and His wisdom, His justice and His
mercy, i;pon it all the world over. There is no other head
nor ruler over it, but He.
(4.) Fourthly, because the riches and plenty of this king-
dom consist all in heavenly and spiritual provisions ; in the
knowledge of God's sacred and heavenly truth, in repentance,
and amendment of our sinful and earthly life, in faith vm-
upon the parable of the tares. 353
feigned, in righteousness and holiness, in love and joy, and
peace in the Holy Ghost. Other provisions then there be,
that come from the revenues and splendours of the world ;
they belong not to the true being and essentials of any
Church or any Christian whatsoever.
(5.) Fifthly, because that through this kingdom of grace
is the way and the passage laid open to heaven itself j there
will be no getting thither any other way.
And lastly, though it be no present fruition, yet it is a
future expectation of that kingdom in heaven ; it is porta
call, as Jacob calls it, the gate of heaven, and the porch of Oen. 28.
the house ; though it be not the house itself, we are sure of ^''•
our entry by it ; or it is appropinquatio regni, as Christ Him-
self calls it, the marches and borders of that kingdom it is.
We are entered so far towards it, though we be not in
heaven itself, and thither it will surely bring us.
So that in reference to this appellation, we are not to
attend so much what this kingdom appears to be now, as
what it will be when Christ shall appear hereafter, to translate
them that have lived well in His kingdom of grace here, to
His kingdom of glory there.
And it is a great comfort to nis this, that our Sa\iour thus
mingles His kingdoms ; that He makes the kingdom of grace
and the kingdom of glory all one, the Church and heaven
itself all one ; assuring us, that if we see Him as He looks
in hoc speculo, in this His glass, as St. Paul terms it, the i Cor. 13.
glass of His ordinances and statutes in this kingdom of His ^^*
word and sacraments, we have already begun to see Him as
He looks in heaven, and as He is in His majesty in that
kingdom of eternal glory.
II. Pass we then the appellation and come to the com-
parison. This kingdom of heaven is compared here to a
field that is sown. Where we will make first, in general,
that Christ in His comparisons pursues His own way, and
does here as He does often in other places. He speaks in
such forms and such similitudes as may most work upon
them to whom He speaks, that thereby all men might have
the word of His kingdom every one in His own terms.
Of king David, who was a shepherd before, God says to
him, that He took him away from the sheep-folds to feed Ps. 78.71,
co.siN. ^ ^ 73.
354 Fragment of a sermon
Append. His people, and he fed them Avitli a faithful and true heart,
'— and ruled them prudently with all his power. To those
magi, the wise and learned men of the east, who were given
Mat. 2. 2. to the knowledge and study of the stars, Christ gave them a
star to be their guide to Him at Bethlehem; a guide apt
and proper for them that were learned that way; their
learning did them no hurt, nor set them ever a whit the
further off from coming to Christ, and learning Him with it.
Mark 1. To those that were fishing in the waters, St. Peter, St.
Andrew, St. James, and St. John, He found them all at that
employment, and presently applied it; told them, if they
would follow Him, He would make them fishers of men.
To them that followed Him to Capernaum for bread. He
Job. 6. 27. took occasion by it to bid them look after the bread and
.Toll. 4. 10. spiritual food of their souls. To the Samaritan, whom He
found at the well, He preached of the water and the well
of life. To the multitudes that stood here upon the land
and saw^ the fields before them, He presents them wuth a
similitude of the same nature with what they had then in
their eye, and preaches the kingdom of heaven to them by a
parable taken from the earth. And it was a parable taken
up and uttered by Him in due season too, for at this very
time, when He was here preaching to them, which fell out
to be at the same time of the year ^ and in the same month,
as Eusebius reckons it, wherein I am now preaching to you,
it was at Palestine the second seed time, when the sower
went out to sow. It w'as ever with Christ best preaching
upon a text when the commentary stood before His auditory ;
that they might have the easier apprehension of His doctrine,
and be the more ready to apply it, make both a corporal and
a spiritual use of what they saw and heard both together.
So Christ applies Himself to all, and puts no man out of
his way to go to heaven ; but by what every man is given to
by his own employment, preaches heaven to him and calls
him thither, makes heaven all things to all men, that He
might gain some. If they love joy, to present it in that
notion ; if they be ambitious of glory, to set it forth that
way ; to the merchant that seeks after wealth, as a pearl of
great price ; to the rest of the people, that stood here upon
" See Greswcll's Dissertations, vol. ii. p. 302, 303.
upon the parable of the tares. 355
the land, and saw the sower at his work, as a field with good
seed in it, growing up till the harvest.
And so I come to the several particulars of this parable ;
as much of it now as lies in those two verses of the text,
which I shall pass through very briefly.
I. There are to be seen in it, referring it to Christ's Church
here upon the earth, the goodness of God ;
II. The malice of the devil ;
III. And the negligence of men.
I. For that Avhich belongs to God's part and Christ's;
first, as He made all things good at the beginning, so He Gen. i. 31.
never made any thing after that is evil. The whole scope of
the parable is to clear Him, that He neither sows any evil
seed in the world Himself, nor that He employs any servants
under Him for that purpose at all.
Servant-sowers there are, now Filius hominis is gone ; but
if they come into the field with any other seed than He left in
store behind Him, He owns them not; nor will His reapers own
them, when the time of harvest comes. But then, as every
plant which He hath not planted will be rooted up, so every
seed that He hath not ministered to the sower, as quick as it
is to grow up among the corn, and as fair a shew as it makes
in the field now.
THE END.
OXFORD : PRINTED BY 1 811R1MPTON.
(-
OOSIN»S WORKS 3X
S03 5
' . L5
v.l.